Unity Quick Search
Search anything in Unity.
Search Providers
Using the shortcut Alt + '
or the Help -> Quick Search
menu will bring out the Quick Search Tool. This extensible tool allows you to search over multiple area of Unity.
It is easy to add new search providers to the Quick Search Tool (see API section below), by default we ship with these SearchProviders
:
Assets
All assets in the current project are available for search. From an asset you can apply the following actions:
- Select the asset (in the Project browser)
- Open the asset (using an external editor if necessary)
- Show in Explorer (Finder)
Asset provider supports advance type filtering (Similar to Project Hierarchy):
Current Scene
All GameObjects in the current scene are available for search. Activating a scene item in the Quick Search tool will select the corresponding GameObject in the Scene.
Menu
Each menu items in Unity is available for search. You can execute the menu item from the Quick Search Tool. This is especially useful to pop that elusive Test Runner or the Profiler!
Settings
Each Project Settings or Preferences pages is available for search. The Quick Search Tool will open the Unified Settings Window at the required pages.
Search the Web
We have created 4 SearchProvider
s to search various Unity websites. Using these providers will open your default browser at a a specific Unity page and perform a search and display some results. You can search the following websites and it is very easy to add new web search providers:
Filters
There are 2 levels of filtering available in the Quick Search Tool:
Provider filters
Those filters define which providers are available for a search. This can help reduce the amount of items return by a search query especially if you know what type of item you are looking for.
Note that there are more specialized shortcuts to call the Quick Search Tool with a specific provider filter enabled:
Alt + Shit + A
: Assets only searchAlt + Shit + M
: Menu only searchAlt + Shit + S
: Scene only search
Provider text filters
From the Quick Search Box you can type a search provider search filter token
that will restrain the search to specific providers. The search tokens are:
- Asset:
p:
- Menu:
me:
- Scene:
h:
- Answers:
ua:
- Documentation:
ud:
- Store:
us:
- Settings:
se:
Example of queries using text providers:
p:Player
: Search assets containing "Player"h:Main Camera
: Search scene for GameObjects with "Main Camera" in their nameme:Test Runner
: Search menus item for Test Runnerse:VFX
: Search settings (project and preferences) for VFX
Provider specific filters
Some provider (i.e the Asset provider) supports specific filters:
As usual you can pass the same search tokens used by the project browser to a search query:
Last Search
When opening the Quick Search Tool using Alt + `
the state (and filters) of your previous search is preserved:
Drag and Drop
Asset items and Scene Items supports drag and drop from the QuickSearch window to anywhere that supports it (hierarchy view, game view, inspector, etc):
API
Creating new SearchProvider
is fairly easy. It basically comes down to providing a function to fetch and search for items and to provide action handlers to activate
any selected item.
SearchProvider
An SearchProvider
manages search for specific type of items and manages thumbnails, description and subfilters. Its basic API is as follow:
public class SearchProvider
{
public SearchProvider(string id, string displayName = null);
// Create an Item bound to this provider.
public SearchItem CreateItem(string id, string label = null, string description = null, Texture2D thumbnail = null);
// Utility functions use to check if a search text matches a string.
public static bool MatchSearchGroups(string searchContext, string content);
public static bool MatchSearchGroups(string searchContext, string content, out int startIndex, out int endIndex);
public NameId name;
// Text filter key use to enable this Provider from the NameId search box
public string filterId;
// Functor used to fetch item description
public DescriptionHandler fetchDescription;
// Functor used to fetch thumbnail icon
public PreviewHandler fetchThumbnail;
// Functor used to execute a search query
public GetItemsHandler fetchItems;
// Functor use to check if an item is still valid
public IsItemValidHandler isItemValid;
// Sub filter specific to this provider
public List<NameId> subCategories;
}
Note that since the UI of the NameId is done using a virtual scrolling algorithm some SearchItem
fields (thumbail and description) are fetched on demand. This means the SearchProvider
needs to be initialized with specific Handlers
(fetchDescription, fetchThumbnail) if you want to populate those fields.
Registering an SearchProvider
Adding a new SearchProvider
is just creating a function tagged with the [SearchItemProvider]
attribute. This function must returns a new SearchProvider
instance:
[SearchItemProvider]
internal static SearchProvider CreateProvider()
{
return new SearchProvider(type, displayName)
{
filterId = "me:",
fetchItems = (context, items, provider) =>
{
var itemNames = new List<string>();
var shortcuts = new List<string>();
GetMenuInfo(itemNames, shortcuts);
items.AddRange(itemNames.Where(menuName =>
SearchProvider.MatchSearchGroups(context.searchText, menuName))
.Select(menuName => provider.CreateItem(menuName, Path.GetFileName(menuName), menuName)));
},
fetchThumbnail = (item, context) => Icons.shortcut
};
}
By default an SearchProvider
must have a type (ex: asset, menu, scene...) that is unique among providers and a display Name (used in the Provider filter dialog).
Specifying a filterId
is optional but it makes text based filtering easier (ex: p: my_asset
).
Performing a search
The bulk of the provider work happens in the fetchItems
functor. This is the function a provider creator must fulfill to do an actual search (and filtering). The fetchItems
signature is:
// context: all the necessary search context (tokenized search, sub filters...)
// items: list of items to populate
// provider: the provider itself
public delegate void GetItemsHandler(SearchContext context, List<SearchItem> items, SearchProvider provider);
The SearchProvider
must add new SearchItem
s to the items
list.
An SearchItem
is a simple struct:
public struct SearchItem
{
// Unique id of this item among this provider items.
public string id;
// Display name of the item
public string label;
// If no description is provided, SearchProvider.fetchDescription will be called when the item is first displayed.
public string description;
// If no thumbnail are provider, SearchProvider.fetchThumbnail will be called when the item is first displayed.
public Texture2D thumbnail;
}
Only the id
is necessary to be filled.
When doing filtering according to SearchContext.searchText
we recommend using the static function SearchProvider.MatchSearchGroup
which makes partial search (and eventually fuzzy search) easy (see example above).
Registering an Action Handler
Actions can be register for a specific provider. These actions buttons will be drawn next to the SearchItem
of the specified provider type:
Since registering an action handler is a different process than regisering a provider this means you can register new action handlers for existing providers (mind blown)!
Here is an example of how to register actions for the Asset provider:
[SearchActionsProvider]
internal static IEnumerable<SearchAction> ActionHandlers()
{
return new[]
{
new SearchAction("asset", "select", Icons.@goto, "Select asset...")
{
handler = (item, context) =>
{
var asset = AssetDatabase.LoadAssetAtPath<Object>(item.id);
if (asset != null)
{
Selection.activeObject = asset;
EditorGUIUtility.PingObject(asset);
EditorWindow.FocusWindowIfItsOpen(Utils.GetProjectBrowserWindowType());
}
}
},
new SearchAction("asset", "open", SearchIcon.open, "Open asset... (Alt+Enter)")
{
handler = (item, context) =>
{
var asset = AssetDatabase.LoadAssetAtPath<Object>(item.id);
if (asset != null) AssetDatabase.OpenAsset(asset);
}
},
new SearchAction("asset", "reveal", SearchIcon.folder, "Show in Explorer")
{
handler = (item, context) =>
{
EditorUtility.RevealInFinder(item.id);
}
}
};
}
Basically you create a function tagged with the [SearchActionsProvider]
attribute. This function must returns an IEnumerable<SearchAction>
.
An SearchAction
describe and action and provide a handler to execute the action on a specific SearchItem
public class SearchAction
{
public SearchAction(string providerType, string name, Texture2D icon = null, string tooltip = null);
public ActionHandler handler;
public EnabledHandler isEnabled;
}
providerType
is the provider unique id for which you are registering the action.
ActionHandler
is of the following signature:
// item: item that needs the action to be executed.
// context: search context of the SearchTool when the item is executed.
public delegate void ActionHandler(SearchItem item, SearchContext context);
An action can be setup with a isEnabled
predicate that will decide if the action is available (i.e. enabled) for a specific item.
SearchService
The SearchService
manages most of the persisted state of the Quick Search Tool and provider a global end point to access the filter.
The common usage of the SearchService
forSearchProvider
writer is to register a shortcut that will open the Quick Search Tool with a specific set of filter enabled:
[Shortcut("Window/Quick Search Tool/Assets", KeyCode.A, ShortcutModifiers.Alt | ShortcutModifiers.Shift)]
public static void PopQuickSearch()
{
// Disable all filter
SearchService.Filter.ResetFilter(false);
// Enabled only the asset SearchProvider
SearchService.Filter.SetFilter(true, "asset");
// Disabled the packages sub filter
SearchService.Filter.SetFilter(false, "asset", "a:packages");
// Open the Quick Search Tool to allow a quick search of assets!
SearchTool.ShowWindow();
}