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Searching for words or phrases
You can search for words or phrases and use wildcard expressions.
Wildcard expressions allow you to search for one or more characters
using a question mark or asterisk. The table below describes the
results of these different kinds of searches.
表格 59-1. Word and phrase searches Search for | Example | Results |
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A single word | select | Topics that contain the word "select". (You will also find its grammatical variations, such as "selector" and "selection".) | A phrase | "new operator" or new operator |
Topics that contain the literal phrase "new operator" and all its grammatical variations.
Without the quotation marks, the query is equivalent to specifying "new AND operator," which
will find topics containing both of the individual words, instead of the phrase.
| Wildcard expressions | esc* or HT?? |
Results for the first example include topics that contain the terms "ESC",
"escape", "escalation", and so on. The asterisk cannot be the only
character in the term.
Results for the second example include topics that contain the terms "HTTP",
"HTML" and so on. The question mark cannot be the only character in the
term.
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注:
Select the Match similar words check box to include minor grammatical variations
for the phrase you search. This feature only locates variations of the word with
common suffixes. For example, a search on the word "add" will find "added," but
it will not find "additive". This option is independent of other options or syntax.
If you do a titles-only search, variations in titles will be matched. If you use
quotes (or any other query operator) any variation of the word can appear; for
example, "stemmed search" will also match "stemming search".
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