Focal Point Banner


As of December 1, 2020, Focal Point is retired and repurposed as a reference repository. We value the wealth of knowledge that's been shared here over the years. You'll continue to have access to this treasure trove of knowledge, for search purposes only.

Join the TIBCO Community
TIBCO Community is a collaborative space for users to share knowledge and support one another in making the best use of TIBCO products and services. There are several TIBCO WebFOCUS resources in the community.

  • From the Home page, select Predict: WebFOCUS to view articles, questions, and trending articles.
  • Select Products from the top navigation bar, scroll, and then select the TIBCO WebFOCUS product page to view product overview, articles, and discussions.
  • Request access to the private WebFOCUS User Group (login required) to network with fellow members.

Former myibi community members should have received an email on 8/3/22 to activate their user accounts to join the community. Check your Spam folder for the email. Please get in touch with us at community@tibco.com for further assistance. Reference the community FAQ to learn more about the community.


Focal Point    Focal Point Forums  Hop To Forum Categories  WebFOCUS/FOCUS Forum on Focal Point     [RESOLVED] Info Assist- Enhancing the search on text box

Read-Only Read-Only Topic
Go
Search
Notify
Tools
[RESOLVED] Info Assist- Enhancing the search on text box
 Login/Join
 
Gold member
posted
I am working in Info Assist, and I created a text box and found that you have to type the exact word for the report to find what you are looking for. Is there a way to use wild cards directly on the text box? For example if I am looking for my first name, I would have to type exactly 'Krista.' Is there a way I would be able to type 'kr' and my name would be found?

This message has been edited. Last edited by: krhapner,


WebFOCUS 8
Windows, All Outputs
 
Posts: 47 | Registered: November 25, 2014Report This Post
Virtuoso
posted Hide Post
Hi Krista,

It's all about how you code your WHERE clause.
Instead of having
WHERE FirstName EQ '&Parm';

Consider
WHERE FirstName CONTAINS '&Parm';

But CONTAINS search anywhere in the field the &Parm value, so think about performance.

You can also use LIKE with wild card instead of CONTAINS but you have to manage the wild cards where CONTAINS doesn't need any...


WF versions : Prod 8.2.04M gen 33, Dev 8.2.04M gen 33, OS : Windows, DB : MSSQL, Outputs : HTML, Excel, PDF
In Focus since 2007
 
Posts: 2409 | Location: Montreal Area, Qc, CA | Registered: September 25, 2013Report This Post
Master
posted Hide Post
Krista,

If you are concerned about the input case, there is no operator that will ignore it. But what you can do is create 2 define fields. One for the FirstName field that uppercases the field, and then another that uppercases the variable being passed in. You would then compare the two fields in your where statement with the contains operator as Martin pointed out.


Eric Woerle
8.1.05M Gen 913- Reporting Server Unix
8.1.05 Client Unix
Oracle 11.2.0.2
 
Posts: 750 | Location: Warrenville, IL | Registered: January 08, 2013Report This Post
Gold member
posted Hide Post
[RESOLVED]
 
Posts: 47 | Registered: November 25, 2014Report This Post
  Powered by Social Strata  

Read-Only Read-Only Topic

Focal Point    Focal Point Forums  Hop To Forum Categories  WebFOCUS/FOCUS Forum on Focal Point     [RESOLVED] Info Assist- Enhancing the search on text box

Copyright © 1996-2020 Information Builders