If you have a tree in Ancestry, then it is likely you have used the "tree search" feature to find someone with a particular name. Even for this simple search it is badly implemented, and its shortfalls are particularly obvious if you have a large tree and the name appears many times in your tree.
1) they could fit more names for each "page" of results.
2) they could fit more information about the resulting purpose to help identification, it currently just gives DOB and death (if available). No use if you have many "John Smith"s born 1800!
3) the filter is at best a joke, because the search options are likely not helpful in filtering down the list in a useful way.
I was wondering if there are any packages, ideally free, which are able to read in a GEDCOM from Ancestry, but allow more sophisticated search filtering?
On FindmyPast I did a search on Henry Smith marriages in a date range, looking for anything which might match a person I am currently expanding in the Ancestry web page. When I opened the search result, it was intriguing. It wasn't the Henry currently being researched, but I immediately recognised the "street name" as one I know appears many times in my tree. But how to find the "search result" Henry (now distracted from the original Henry) ?
I used the "tree search" feature in Ancestry for "Henry Smith", and get 5 pages of 10, 45 in total. There are 3 or 4 candidates about the right date. But hold on, what I really want to search for is "name=Henry Smith, father=John, Street(contains)Station Road". It's the street part that is important to me. I would also, ot of interest, like to do a search "return all names of people who have lived in Station Road".
Again yesterday while adding for a different Benjamin I came across the name of a small place called "Brightholmlee" which I immediately recognised from some previous research some months ago on the same family name (single surname research). This place could link different branches together if they live in the same (small) place they are likely related, possibly siblings. But I have no way in Ancestry (as far as I am aware) to make that search. I guess I am surprosed that Ancestry have not realised the value of a sophisticated search.
My current solution is to open the GEDCOM in a text editor and use the simple text search feature of the editor to find (usually) place names, and then you have to navigate around to find the associated name, which is not always clear and obvious in this file format. This method is slow and tedious.
I did at one time buy some software from Ancestry, which was to allow me to have the tree on a laptop when I visited a Family History centre in the UK, but I ended up rarely using it. I have no idea where the disk (CD) is, let alone the install key. I don't even know on which PC or laptop it was installed. I just mention this in case it does have the type of search I am looking for, as perhaps I can ressurect it. Just googled, it might have been "Family Tree Maker". Aha, just found the box. Is it worth re-installing for it's search features?
Sorry for the bit of a rant, but with a big tree, I get more and more frustrated with Ancestry bugs and missing features to allow the tree to be managed. For example from the recommended drop down fill in text, I know that I have mis-spelt Yorkshire as Yorshire, but of course I have no way to find these mis-spelling records in order to corrent them.