Searching Your Database

There are two ways to search your database.
The search bar is always available in the main window and provides instant access to the powerful search facilities built into Readerware. Select the column or field you want to search, the operator to use and the value you want to search for. Click on the Search button or hit the Enter key to begin your search.

You can click on the Adv. Search button to build a more complicated search. You can enter multiple conditions and combine them with and/or. You can also save your advanced searches and easily run them at any time by selecting them from the Search->Saved searches menu item.

You can use the search bar for quick, simple searches and you can use the Advanced Search Window to build more sophisticated searches. With advanced search you can search on multiple fields, you can search fields for multiple values, date ranges etc.

A Readerware search consists of three components:
The operator list is new in Readerware 4 and gives you more control over your searches. In Readerware 3 you could include wildcards in the value field to achieve some of these results. In Readerware 4 the use of wildcards is discouraged, use the operators contains, begins with and ends with instead. If you do enter wildcards in your search values, the operator selection is ignored.

That is really all there is to it. A more detailed explanation of the various search options follow. At this point you might prefer to simply go and play.

The Search Bar

The search bar is always available in the main window and provides instant access to the powerful search facilities built into Readerware. Select the column or field you want to search, the operator to use and the value you want to search for. Click on the Search button or hit the Enter key to begin your search.

You can search on virtually any field. As you select the different search types you will notice that the operator list and search criteria field will change. Sometimes you will type the search criteria in an entry field, for example a title search. Sometimes you will select from a list, for example an author search.

You can configure the search bar, put the searches you use all the time at the top of the list, hide searches you never use etc. If you are looking for one of the searches listed below but don't see it in the search list, you just need to enable it in preferences.

The operator list is new in Readerware 4 and gives you more control over your searches. The list of operators will vary based on field selection. For example if you search a text field like title the operators will include:
If you select a date search you will have operators to search for an exact match, on or after, before etc.

If you select a numeric field then you will have operators to search for an exact match, greater than, less than etc.

If you search a contributor like Author, Editor, Illustrator etc., there is one additional option that you can set to refine your searches. Select the Preferences menu item, then Contributors. There is an option to Force a wildcard search. If that option is selected then the default operator is set to Contains and Readerware will search for all contributors containing the value. If not checked then the default operator will be set to Is and Readerware will search for an exact match.


Readerware Book Searches
Search Description
Author Select an author from the list using the mouse or keyboard. You can also type part of a name and select an operator like Contains
Book ID Enter a book ID
Book Info Enter search text
Borrower Select a borrower from the list to display a list of books currently on loan to this borrower
Borrower ID Enter or scan a Borrower ID to display a list of books currently on loan to this borrower
Buyer waiting Select a value from the list using the mouse or keyboard
Call Number Enter a Call Number
Category Select a category from the list using the mouse or keyboard. Readerware will search all category fields.
Chapter title Enter part of a title, Readerware will return any book with a chapter title containing these characters
Comments Enter search text
Condition Select a condition from the list using the mouse or keyboard
Contributor Select a contributor from the list using the mouse or keyboard. You can also type part of a name and select an operator like Contains. Readerware will search all contributor fields, Author, Editor etc.
Copies Select a value from the list using the mouse or keyboard. Readerware will search based on the number of copies of a book you have
Copyright date Click on the down arrow and select the date using the calendar or type it in
Cover condition Select a condition from the list using the mouse or keyboard
Date entered Click on the down arrow and select the date using the calendar. Choose an operator to search on just that date, on or after that date etc.
Date last updated Click on the down arrow and select the date using the calendar
Dewey Enter a Dewey Decimal Number
Duplicates The duplicates search will return possible duplicate books. You can determine which fields are matched when checking for duplicates in preferences.
Edition Select a value from the list to search by edition, First etc.
Editor Select a contributor from the list using the mouse or keyboard. You can also type part of a name and select an operator like Contains.
Favorites Select a value from the list using the mouse or keyboard
Format Select a value from the list to search by book format, Hardcover, Paperback, eBook etc.
Full text search Enter search text. Readerware will search all text fields for the entered value, title, author, book info etc.
Illustrator Select a contributor from the list using the mouse or keyboard. You can also type part of a name and select an operator like Contains.
Image Select a value from the list, Readerware will display books with and without images
Inventory count Select a value from the list using the mouse or keyboard. The inventory count search is used to make sure all items are present after performing an inventory of your collection.
ISBN/Barcode Enter an ISBN or scan the barcode
Keys search Enter search text. Readerware will search all key fields for the entered value, ISBN, User Number, Book ID, Call Number etc.
Keywords Enter comma separated keywords. Choose from the operator list to determine how Readerware combines the keywords. Keyword order is not important
Language Select a value from the list to search by language
Last read date Click on the down arrow and select the date using the calendar. Choose an operator to search on just that date, on or after that date etc.
LCCN Enter a Library of Congress Card Catalog number
Location Select a location from the list using the mouse or keyboard
Loan Count Search based on the number of times a book has been loaned out. You can search for an exact match, less than, greater than etc.
Loans Select a value from the list using the mouse or keyboard. Readerware can search for books on loan, overdue etc. If loan columns are displayed, the loan information will be included. This search returns all active loans, if you have 5 copies of a book out on loan, the book is listed 5 times with the information for each loan
My Rating Select a rating from the list using the mouse or keyboard
Out of print Select a value from the list using the mouse or keyboard. Readerware will search for books in or out of print
Owner Select a value from the list using the mouse or keyboard to search by owner
Place Select a value from the list using the mouse or keyboard
Publisher Select a value from the list using the mouse or keyboard
Purchase date Click on the down arrow and select the date using the calendar, Choose an operator to search on just that date, on or after that date etc.
Purchase place Select a value from the list using the mouse or keyboard
Read Select a value from the list using the mouse or keyboard
Reading Level Select a value from the list using the mouse or keyboard
Release date Click on the down arrow and select the date using the calendar or type it in
Series Select a value from the list. Readerware will search for books that are part of the specified series
Signed Select a value from the list using the mouse or keyboard
Source Select a value from the list using the mouse or keyboard to search by the source used to catalog the book
Status Select a value from the list using the mouse or keyboard
Title Enter part of a title, Readerware will return any item where the title contains these characters
Translator Select a contributor from the list using the mouse or keyboard. You can also type part of a name and select an operator like Contains.
Updated by last wizard This search will display those items updated by the last wizard run, i.e. the last auto-catalog run. This can be useful when you want to review the changes made by a wizard
User number Enter the user number of a book
User 1 -
User 10
These searches will appear in the search list under the name you assigned for any user defined fields you activated. Enter search text
Value Enter the book value you are looking for
ASIN Enter an ASIN


The Advanced Search Window

When you click on the Adv. Search button the Advanced Search Window is displayed. The current search, i.e. the contents of the search bar in the main window are included as the first search bar.

To add additional search criteria click on the And or the Or button. A new search bar is added and the two searches are combined using the selected operator. If you make a mistake and select the wrong operator, you can just click on the correct operator. The selected operator is always highlighted.

The advanced window search bar is the same search bar you use in the main window so you should be familiar with defining your searches. Refer the the Search Bar section for more information.

You can add as many search bars as you need. Click on the - button to remove any extra search bars.

Click on the Run Search button to run your search. The search window remains open so you always return to it and edit your search if you do not get the expected results.

Once your search is working as expected you can save it if you plan on using it again. Click on the Save As button to save a new search. You will be prompted to name the search and this will now be displayed on the Search->Saved searches menu item. Click on the Save button to save changes made to an already saved search.

To copy an existing saved search, select it and click on the Save As button. The search is saved under the new name and you can modify it.

You can delete a saved search that you no longer need by clicking on the Delete button.

You can switch between saved searches by selecting from the Saved searches drop down list. If a search has been saved the name of the search is displayed in the window title bar and it is selected in the search list. So you always know which search you are working on.

To start a new search, click on the New Search button. The first search bar will be reset to the default search and additional search bars removed. You can then configure a new search. Only the search window is reset. If the search has been saved, it is still in the saved search list.

The Default Search

Readerware allows you to define a default search. Readerware runs this search when you start the program or open a new database. Initially the default search is set to search for all titles and display them sorted by author and title. To define your own default search simply perform the search as normal using the search bar in the main window. Now select the Search->Save as Default Search menu item. For example you could set the default search to display all unread titles or books in a specific category.

Searching for Duplicates

The duplicates search lets you quickly find duplicate entries in your database. Select Duplicates from the search by drop down list and click on the Search button. Readerware will display a list of possible duplicate entries. If you do not see the Duplicates entry in the search list, remember that you can customize the search list. You can hide the searches you never use and move the searches you use all the time to the top of the list. If you don't see the Duplicates search, you just need to enable it in preferences.

Before you use the Duplicates search, there is one more question you need to consider, what is a duplicate? You have to tell Readerware how to detect a duplicate entry, you do this by selecting the columns Readerware should match on.

You might consider a duplicate to be a book with the same ISBN. You would select the ISBN column and then Readerware will display a list of books with duplicate ISBNs. The results list will include all books where two or more books have the same ISBN. However you could have the same title with different ISBNs, if you want to check for all copies of a particular title you could select the Author and Title columns. What about format? Would you consider a hardcover and paperback edition of the same title to be duplicates? If you do, then select the Author and Title columns in preferences. If you do not consider them duplicates, include the Format column too. Now Readerware will only display titles with the same format as duplicates.

You determine what constitutes a duplicate. If you are storing your books in different locations, you might only consider books in the same location to be duplicates, the same title in another location is not considered a duplicate. So you include the Location column in the duplicate check. This is a very flexible approach and you can always change the selection as the term duplicate may mean different things to you in different situations.

When Readerware displays the duplicates it lists only items that have two or more matches and it lists all duplicate items. If you only have one book with a specific ISBN, it will not appear in the search results. If you have two books with the same ISBN, both books are listed. Four books with the same ISBN, all four books are listed. You can then examine each book and decide what to do. If you want to delete duplicates, you can decide what entry to keep and what entries to delete etc.

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