Improve the performance of your duplicate case search and limit the number of potential
duplicates by defining weighted conditions for a potential duplicate case. Determine whether the
case is a potential duplicate by assigning a relative weight to each condition, and by
calculating the total weight of a case.
Before you begin: Add a Search duplicate cases shape to the life cycle of your
case type.
For
more information, see
Searching duplicate cases.
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In the navigation pane of Dev Studio, click Case types, and then click the
case type that you want to open.
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In the case working area, on the Workflow tab, click
Life cycle.
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In the Case life cycle section,
click
the Search duplicate cases step for which you want to define the
weighted conditions.
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In the step property panel, click Add weighted condition.
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In the dialog box that appears, in the Weight field,
enter
a value between 1 and 100 that you want to add to the total weight of a case when the case
meets the condition.
For example: When you create three conditions with the weight of 20 each, the total weight is
60.
-
In the Potential duplicate, Comparator,
and Current case fields, enter
the
property names and values that you want to use to determine duplicates. in a comparison
against the existing cases, to determine duplicates.
The application uses these values to compare existing cases against the current case
to identify potential duplicates.
For example: To compare your case with all cases that contain the same email address, enter
Case status is equal to Pending-Blocked.
-
Click OK.
- Optional:
To add more weighted conditions, repeat steps 4 through 7.
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In the And weighted conditions sum at least field, enter a sum
of weights that represents a threshold when the case is a potential duplicate.
Tip: The threshold value should be lower than the sum of all weighted
conditions.
-
Click Save.
Result: At run time, the application evaluates the conditions that have
different weights to determine which cases are less or more likely to be duplicates. Users can
decide whether to close a case as a duplicate or ignore the potential duplicate and continue.
A dialog box provides the reason for marking the case as a potential duplicate, which helps
users make an informed decision.