Showing posts with label WCF. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WCF. Show all posts

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Mimic wikipedia for SharePoint 2010 search



Recently, there was a user requirement for customizing SharePoint 2010 Enterprise wiki search control. 


Objective: Mimicking Wikipedia search box functionality, whereby when a user enters a wiki page title, if there is an exact hit, we should redirect the user to the page, instead of displaying SharePoint's default result page. (Less the autocomplete)


Using jQuery & a bit of digging into SP.js, i found that internally, SharePoint actually uses a javascript function called "SubmitSearchRedirect", which actually redirects the user to "/_layouts/searchresults.aspx" and appending the search keyword as the querystring. 

So a seemingly difficult request was actually completed in less than 10 mins.



function applyCustomSearch() {
            $("#onetIDGoSearch").attr("onclick", ""); //user click on search img
            $("#idSearchString").attr("onkeydown", ""); //user keystroke

            $("#onetIDGoSearch").click(function() {
                <Your AJAX function to check if the page exists>($("#idSearchString").val(), function(exactHit){
                    if(exactHit== true) { //simulate got exact hit
                        window.location = "http://"+ document.domain +"/<Your Enterprise Wiki Homepage>/" + $("#idSearchString").val() + ".aspx?ContextId=" + $.queryString("ContextId");
                    } else { 
                        SubmitSearchRedirect("http://"+ document.domain +"/_layouts/searchresults.aspx");
                    }           
                });
            });

            $("#idSearchString").keydown(function (event) {                
                if (event.keyCode == '13') {
                    event.preventDefault();
                    <Your AJAX function to check if the page exists>($("#idSearchString").val(), function(exactHit){
                    if(exactHit== true) { //simulate got exact hit
                        window.location = "http://"+ document.domain +"/<Your Enterprise Wiki Homepage>/" + $("#idSearchString").val() + ".aspx?ContextId=" + $.queryString("ContextId");
                    } else { 
                        SubmitSearchRedirect("http://"+ document.domain +"/_layouts/searchresults.aspx");
                    }           
                });
}); }

The logic is dead simple. 

For my project, i used an event receiver to track all the articles by saving them into a database and creating a tag cloud. So i had the benefit of knowing exactly how many article pages and how they are being named. So all i did was a simple $.getJSON() to my custom RESTful WCF service, which returns a boolean, and the rest is straightforward.

For simpler projects, you can either use http://spservices.codeplex.com/ to query the wiki pages library for the article existence.

I shall do a blogpost on how to embed jQuery library into SharePoint 2010 in the subsequent posts.


Thursday, December 30, 2010

Silverlight on sharepoint

Recently, i have a silverlight project being handed over to me, i was supposed to evaluate the security concerns that might go against my client's policy. I started off adding the feature into my site, saw the new web part.. added the web part to my site, but all it shows was a blank white space, it can't be clicked, when i right click, there's only a generic silverlight context menu. A bit of searching on msdn/technet, i saw this post: silverlight mime, did as they said and the fanciful silverlight components starting to load :)