Hi Richard,

I can tell you what we did when we faced a similar requirement.  We needed
to store things like custom ringtone, "straight-to-voicemail" etc on a
per-contact basis.  What we ended up doing is simply replicating this
information into each raw contact in the aggregate. When raw contacts are
re-aggregated, we use a heuristic to figure out the values for the entire
aggregate (e.g. if one of the raw contacts has straight-to-voicemail=false,
then the entire contact has straight-to-voicemail=false).

I would do the same in your case.  You can always get _ids of all raw
contacts in an aggregate contact and then in your database have a row for
each of those raw contacts.   To retrieve the information for an aggregate
contact, you would pull it for all constituent raw contacts and use an
algorithm to "aggregate" the data.

Does that make sense?

Cheers,
- Dmitri

On Wed, Nov 4, 2009 at 4:45 AM, jarkman <jark...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Dmitri - thanks - that's perfect.
>
> So, we have two choices -
>
> (1) For each incoming contact URI, loop over our table of stored
> lookup keys, looking each one up with
> ContactsContract.Contacts.lookupContact(resolver, lookupUri) and
> comparing with the incoming contact.
>
> I think that will be reliable, and makes the best use of your cunning
> lookup mechanisms, but could be a performance problem.
>
>
> (2) Move our custom data into the generic data store in the contacts
> database ( as hinted at here:
>
> http://groups.google.com/group/android-developers/browse_thread/thread/690cd4e531205b0c/364e21a52b00491c?lnk=gst&q=contacts#364e21a52b00491c
> )
>
> That should be reliable, but I am not sure what will happen to the
> generic data rows over contact aggregation and disaggregation.
> Presumably we may find a contact who has two instances of our custom
> data (after aggregation) or none (after disaggregation, if our custom
> data stayed with the other half of the results).
>
>
> (3) In our own table, keep all the raw contact IDs for each aggregated
> contact we are interested in. That lets us deal with the aftermath of
> aggregation and disaggregation explicitly, and it lets us search
> quickly by comparing IDs, but it means we need to do something
> complicated to clean up our data after a disaggregation has has
> happened.
>
> Do you think that covers it ?
>
>
> Richard
>
> On Nov 3, 7:17 pm, Dmitri Plotnikov <dplotni...@google.com> wrote:
> > Hi Richard,
> >
> > Lookup key is unique at any point in time.  It's not unique over time.
> >
> > The anatomy of a lookup key is basically this.  If an aggregate contact
> has
> > three raw contacts with server-side IDs "A", "B" and "C", the lookup key
> > will effectively be  accountA/A.accountB/B.accountC/C
> >
> > We don't attempt to find a contact with that exact lookup key.  We
> actually
> > parse it, find all those three raw contacts and infer the id of the new
> > contact ID, which will be the one containing the most of the original raw
> > contacts. In other words, even though the result is a bit unpredictable,
> the
> > user shouldn't be surprised by what they see.  The original contact had
> A, B
> > and C - now I am looking at something that has either A or B or C or a
> > couple of those or maybe A,B,C and D.
> >
> > You are right that you should not use lookup keys to compare contact
> > identities to each other.  You can use the
> > ContactsContract.Contacts.lookupContact(resolver, lookupUri) method,
> which
> > will give you the current contact ID for your contact.  Be careful though
> -
> > between the moment you get it and the moment you use it the contact may
> > change.  Any kind of background sync could cause this change to happen.
>  I
> > would try to design the software in such a way that either doesn't need
> to
> > do this type of resolution or uses something even more robust than lookup
> > keys, e.g. raw contact IDs.
> >
> > I hope this helps,
> > - Dmitri
> >
> > On Tue, Nov 3, 2009 at 6:40 AM, jarkman <jark...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > > Oh - one more question:
> >
> > > Am I right in thinking that the lookup URI is not itself a unique,
> > > stable identifier ? That is, the lookup URI for one contact may be
> > > different at different times.
> >
> > > Right now, we store some contact row IDs in a table, along with per-
> > > contact settings of our own. We use a WHERE clause on the contact ID
> > > to pull out the settings for a particular contact.
> >
> > > If we store lookup URIs in the table, and want to find some current
> > > contact in that table, we cannot do it by comparing lookup URIs
> > > directly, because the lookup URI for the target contact may have
> > > changed since we wrote the table. If we want to compare two lookup
> > > URIs to see if they refer to the same person, we need to look them
> > > both up in the contacts table and see if they have the same record ID
> > > right now. Is that right ?
> >
> > > Thanks,
> >
> > > Richard
> >
> > > On Nov 2, 5:32 pm, Dmitri Plotnikov <dplotni...@google.com> wrote:
> > > > Hi Richard,
> >
> > > > You are exactly right.  If you want a robust persistent reference to
> a
> > > > contact, you now need to use the lookup URI.  Android itself uses
> lookup
> > > > URIs for shortcuts, Quick Contact etc.  The main reason contact ID is
> > > > volatile is that Android 2.0 has contact aggregation, both automatic
> and
> > > > manual.  Let's say your app stored a long ID of a contact.  Then the
> user
> > > > goes and manually joins the contact with some other contact. Now we
> have
> > > one
> > > > contact where we used to have two - the stored long contact ID points
> > > > nowhere.  However, the lookup key is more resilient.  It's a string
> > > > concatenating identities of raw contacts.  Using that string, we can
> > > still
> > > > track down a contact as it is joined with others or separated from
> them.
> >
> > > > There are two options available to you: you can store just the lookup
> > > key,
> > > > which is a string id of a contact, or you can use both the lookup and
> the
> > > > long id of a contact.  The latter will give you better performance,
> but
> > > > functionally the long id is not required.  I would take this
> approach: if
> > > > you need to bulk-process contacts, maintain both ids.  If your app
> works
> > > > with a single contact per user action - you don't need to bother with
> the
> > > > long id.
> >
> > > > I hope this helps,
> > > > - Dmitri
> >
> > > > On Mon, Nov 2, 2009 at 9:02 AM, jarkman <jark...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > > > > In the course of moving to the 2.0 cotnact APIs, I've stumbled
> across
> > > > > CONTENT_LOOKUP_URI :
> >
> > > > >
> http://developer.android.com/reference/android/provider/ContactsContr.
> > > ..
> >
> > > > > "As long as the contact's row ID remains the same, this URI is
> > > > > equivalent to CONTENT_URI. If the contact's row ID changes as a
> result
> > > > > of a sync or aggregation, this URI will look up the contact using
> > > > > indirect information "
> >
> > > > > Currently, we store contact IDs to identify particular contacts. If
> I
> > > > > read this right, contact IDs will no longer be stable in the world
> of
> > > > > 2.0, and we will need to store a lookup URI (or at least a
> LOOKUP_KEY
> > > > > and a row ID) in order to identify a contact in a stable way.
> >
> > > > > That would be a substantial change in our code. So, before I rush
> off
> > > > > to do it, I'd love to find out if a contact row ID change is going
> to
> > > > > be a routine thing (say, on every sync), or if it will be a very
> rare
> > > > > thing (say, when two contacts are manually combined into one, or
> some
> > > > > even rarer exception).
> >
> > > > > Any clues ?
> >
> > > > > Thanks,
> >
> > > > > Richard
> >
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