Search RequestsSearch supports boolean search requests, consisting of a group of words or phrases linked by connectors such as and and or that indicate the relationship between them. Examples:
If you use more than one connector, you should use parentheses to indicate precisely what you want to search for. For example, apple and pear or orange juice could mean (apple and pear) or orange, or it could mean apple and (pear or orange). Noise words, such as if and the, are ignored in searches. Search terms may include the following special characters:
You do not need to use any special punctuation or commands to search for a phrase. Simply enter the phrase the way it ordinarily appears. You can use a phrase anywhere in a search request. Example: apple w/5 fruit salad If a phrase contains a noise word, Search will skip over the noise word when searching for it. For example, a search for statue of liberty would retrieve any document containing the word statue, any intervening word, and the word liberty. Punctuation inside of a search word is treated as a space. Thus, can't would be treated as a phrase consisting of two words: can and t. 1843(c)(8)(ii) would become 1843 c 8 ii (four words). A search word can contain the wildcard characters * and ?. A ? in a word matches any single character, and a * matches any number of characters. The wildcard characters can be in any position in a word. For example: appl* would match apple, application, etc. *cipl* would match principle, participle, etc. appl? would match apply and apple but not apples. ap*ed would match applied, approved, etc. Use of the * wildcard character near the beginning of a word will slow searches somewhat. Synonym searching finds synonyms of a word in a search request. For example, a search for fast would also find quick. You can enable synonym searching for all words in a request or you can enable synonym searching selectively by adding the & character after certain words in a request. Example: fast& w/5 search. Phonic searching looks for a word that sounds like the word you are searching for and begins with the same letter. For example, a phonic search for Smith will also find Smithe and Smythe. To ask Search to search for a word phonically, put a # in front of the word in your search request. Examples: #smith, #johnson Stemming extends a search to cover grammatical variations on a word. For example, a search for fish would also find fishing. A search for applied would also find applying, applies, and apply. Just add a ~ at the end of words that you want stemmed in a search. Example: apply~ Use the W/N connector in a search request to specify that one word or phrase must occur within N words of the other. For example, apple w/5 pear would retrieve any document that contained apple within 5 words of pear. The following are examples of search requests using W/N: (apple or pear) w/5 banana (apple w/5 banana) w/10 pear (apple and banana) w/10 pear Some types of complex expressions using the W/N connector will produce ambiguous results and should not be used. The following are examples of ambiguous search requests: (apple and banana) w/10 (pear and grape) (apple w/10 banana) w/10 (pear and grape) In general, at least one of the two expressions connected by W/N must be a single word or phrase or a group of words and phrases connected by OR. Example: (apple and banana) w/10 (pear or grape) (apple and banana) w/10 orange tree Search uses two built in search words to mark the beginning and end of a file: xfirstword and xlastword. The terms are useful if you want to limit a search to the beginning or end of a file. For example, apple w/10 xlastword would search for apple within 10 words of the end of a document. Use NOT in front of any search expression to reverse its meaning. This allows you to exclude documents from a search. Example: apple sauce and not pear NOT standing alone can be the start of a search request. For example, not pear would retrieve all documents that did not contain pear. If NOT is not the first connector in a request, you need to use either AND or OR with NOT: apple or not pear not (apple w/5 pear) The NOT W/ ("not within") operator allows you to search for a word or phrase not in association with another word or phrase. Example: apple not w/20 pear Unlike the W/ operator, NOT W/ is not symmetrical. That is, apple not w/20 pear is not the same as pear not w/20 apple. In the apple not w/20 pear request, Search searches for apple and excludes cases where apple is too close to pear. In the pear not w/20 apple request, Search searches for pear and excludes cases where pear is too close to apple. |
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