General searching rules
A basic search consists of the word or phrase you want to find. You
can use wildcard expressions, nested expressions, boolean operators,
similar word matches, a previous results list, or topic titles to further
define your search.
The basic rules for formulating queries are as follows:
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Searches are not case-sensitive, so you can type your search in uppercase or lowercase characters.
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You may search for any combination of letters (a-z) and numbers (0-9).
You cannot search for single letters (a, b, c, etc.) and common
words, like: an, and, as, at, be, but, by, do, for, from, have, he,
in, it, not, of, on, or, she, that, the, there, they, this, to, we,
which, with, you.
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Punctuation marks such as the period (.), colon (:), semicolon (;), comma (,),
and hyphen (-) are ignored during a search.
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Group the elements of your search using double quotes or parentheses to set apart each element. You cannot search for quotation marks.
Note:
If you are searching for a file name with an extension, you should group
the entire string in double quotes, ("filename.ext"). Otherwise, the period
will break the file name into two separate terms. The default operation
between terms is AND, so you will create the logical equivalent to
"filename AND ext."