Instead, you currently have to select a view on the left before any search results appear. Also, you can't search movies when in a music view, or pictures from a video view, etc.
A full library search function (enabled by default) would making finding media files a lot faster, for both simple and complex setups.
I agree. I always have to do it twice.
Oh no, don't change the way that works. It would break my workflow completely. I use the search within a View ALL the time, and it is logical to expect the search to only work on what is within the view.
I have nearly 30,000 audio files, and just less than 2,000 movie files. I don't want to see results from my audio files when I am searching for a movie. The list could be huge! I would have to refine the search in a similar way to what the View is already doing to find what I wanted, which means typing [Media Sub Type]=movie in every movie search. No. Just no.
Of course, if the search function can be modified so that when no View is selected, it searches the whole Library, I could live with that. But you might find you actually don't like the result. In total I have over 37,000 files in my Library. Search for "Love" in that; 2307 hits! A big list to scroll through to find what I want. Not to mention most of the display formats with mixed media types is a mess.
If you want a full library search to be available at startup, create a View that is not restricted at all and have MC start at that location. Of course that doesn't work perfectly now. You may need to allow View creation under the Start group for example, so you can specify starting in the Start location and automatically select the one View under there or something. Or enhance the Start location so that it can specify a particular View, instead of just a group.
Perhaps if a search criteria is entered but no View is selected, retain the criteria until a View is selected, so that it doesn't have to be entered again.
But whatever you do, don't break the existing "search within a View" functionality. That would be disastrous.