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Tips, tips and more tips!
Each term may be preceded by the standard Boolean operators
not, and, or or. If you search for
"dogs not pizzas", you'll find all documents
containing the word "dogs" except those documents
which also contain the word "pizzas". If you type in
"and hot and dog and pizzas", you'll find only those
documents which contain all three search terms. The default
value is or. Thus, a search for "hot dog pizzas"
would return pages with at least one of the three
terms.
Altavista's shorthand notation works too. A search on
"dogs -hot" is equivalent to the first example, and
"+hot +dog +pizzas" will return the same documents as the
second.
If a search term has at least one capital letter, like
"parIS", the search will be case sensitive with respect to
that word - that is, only documents containing "parIS" will
be found. On the other hand, lowercase words like "paris"
will generate hits from "Paris", "PARIS", or
"parIS".
To group a collection of words, use quotes. For example, the
query "Zoltan Milosevic" (quotes included) would not
generate a hit from "Slobodan Milosevic met with Zoltan Smith".
Without quotes, the sentence would count. Boolean operators can also
act on quotations: a search on '+the +kitten not "the
kitten"' would return only those documents where "the"
and "kitten" appear separately.
Intermediate Search finds words, not strings. A search for
"in" would turn up only that word, not "bin",
"inside", or "acquaintance". To perform a string
search, preface your term with the dollar sign - a query on
"$in" would find all words lists above. Note that more
complex wildcard searches using the asterisk are not
permitted. Including the asterisk in your query will return a list
of all files, but that's its only function.
These rules are based on Altavista's query syntax |