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Re: Searching a full name



Hi William,
I've done what was needed but I have a tiny problem that comes down to my lack of knoledge of the Java Classes I think: I want to populate the first and last name iVars but this code isn't doing that too well... populates one but not the other.


Any ideas?

StringTokenizer st = new StringTokenizer(allFields, " ," );
try {
while (st.hasMoreTokens()) {
NSLog.out.appendln("===\r"+ st.nextToken() +
"... token index = " +st.countTokens());
if (st.countTokens()==1) takeValueForKey(st.nextToken(), "firstName");
if (st.countTokens()==2) takeValueForKey(st.nextToken(), "lastName");
}
}
catch(Exception e){
NSLog.out.appendln("===\r show me what happened!!!");
e.printStackTrace();
}



TIA Jonathan :^)


From: William Norris <email@hidden>
Reply-To: William Norris <email@hidden>
To: Jonathan Fleming <email@hidden>, "WebObjects (Group)" <email@hidden>
Subject: Re: Searching a full name
Date: Sat, 25 Sep 2004 13:19:17 -0500


On Sat, 25 Sep 2004 18:48:56 +0100, Jonathan Fleming
<email@hidden> wrote:
it's this what is my problem:
> ((firstName like $tradingName) and (lastName like $tradingName)) but could
> make it function correctly so started to add the whitespace column but I
> know for sure that I'm doing something seriously back to front, I just cant
> think so... I need someone's fresh head 'cause mine's is still awash with
> sleep deprivationform this week.... silly me.



(I'm guessing you have a single input box where the user can enter their full name). When the form is submitted, $tradingName potentially holds two pieces of information -- both the user's firstname as well as their last name. The easiest (and probably most logical) thing to do would be to split $tradingName wherever their is a whitespace and treat each substring as an individual token. They might have entered last name first, so you'll want to check each token against each database field.

for example, if $tradingName had one space in it, and you split it
into two strings, $tn1 and $tn2, your qualifier would look something
like...  (((firstName like $tn1) or (lastName like $tn1)) and
((firstName like $tn2) or (lastName like $tn2))).

This could (and probably should) be expanded a bit to account for
multiple spaces, commas between last and first name, etc.

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