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Search & Browse
Searching Tips
Simple Search: To find a topic on the NJHA Web site, enter a word or
phrase in the box and press the Find button (you don't need to enclose phrases
in quotes). You will see a list of page links that match your request, along
with their page titles. Press the Clear button to enter another word or phrase.
Advanced Search: You can use advanced techniques (including boolean
operators) to refine your search of the NJHA Web site:
(The following is an excerpt from the Microsoft Index Server
Guide.)
Query Language
This list gives the rules for formulating advanced queries:
- Multiple consecutive words are treated as a phrase; they must appear in the
same order within a matching document.
- Queries are case-insensitive, so you can type your query in uppercase or
lowercase.
- You can search for any word except for those in the exception list (for
English, this includes a, an, and, as,
and other common words), which are ignored during a search.
- Words in the exception list are treated as placeholders in phrase and proximity
queries. For example, if you searched for "Word for Windows", the results could
give you "Word for Windows" and "Word and Windows", because for
is a noise word and appears in the exception list.
- Punctuation marks such as the period (.), colon (:), semicolon (;), and comma
(,) are ignored during a search.
- To use specially treated characters such as &, |, ^, #, @, $, (, ), in a
query, enclose your query in quotation marks (").
- To search for a word or phrase containing quotation marks, enclose the entire
phrase in quotation marks and then double the quotation marks around the word
or words you want to surround with quotes. For example, "World-Wide Web or
""Web""" searches for World-Wide Web or "Web".
- You can use Boolean Operators (AND,
OR, and NOT) and the
Proximity Operator (NEAR) to specify additional
search information.
- The Wildcard Character (*) can match words with a given
prefix. The query esc* matches the terms "ESC," "escape," and so on.
Boolean and Proximity Operators
Boolean and proximity operators can create a more precise query.
| To Search For |
Example |
Results |
| Both terms in the same page |
access and basic -Or- access & basic |
Pages with both the words "access" and "basic" |
| Either term in a page |
cgi or isapi -Or- cgi | isapi |
Pages with the words "cgi" or "isapi" |
| The first term without the second term |
access and not basic -Or- access & ! basic |
Pages with the word "access" but not "basic" |
| Both terms in the same page, close together |
excel near project -Or- excel ~ project |
Pages with the word "excel" near the word "project" |
Wildcards
Wildcard operators help you find pages containing words similar to a given word.
| To Search For |
Example |
Results |
| Words with the same prefix |
comput* |
Pages with words that have the prefix "comput," such as "computer," "computing," and so on |
| Words based on the same stem word |
fly** |
Pages with words based on the same stem as "fly," such as "flying," "flown," "flew," and so onon |
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