You can search content by any word in text.
On Navigator or on a Search dialog box, locate the field Full text, and then enter one or more words to search for.
As soon as you type something in the field, the search option changes to the default option, that may be Some or All.
Click the refresh button if the results do not appear.
Enter the word. |
Enter the word and an asterisk. •If you are using the Exalead search engine, you can put an asterisk at the beginning and at the end of the partial word. •If you are using the SQL search engine, you can put an asterisk only at the end of the partial word. |
Enter words and then select the All option. Only content that contain all words from your search request are shown. The more words you put in your search request, the more precise the search becomes. |
Enter words and then select the Some option. Only content that contain any of words from your search request are shown. The more words you put in your search request, the more results are returned. |
Enter words and then select the Near option. This finds documents content the words are all in a short range of proximity. |
Enter words and then select the Exact option. This excludes the content where the words occur but are not next to one another or are in the different order. |
Enter words and then select the ButNot option. This excludes the content where the words occur. |
Enter words and then select the SpellsLike option. This includes the content where the words are spelled similarly to what you entered. |
Enter words and then select the SoundsLike option. This includes the content where the words sound approximately as you entered. |
See the Advanced search option in Options for full-text search. |
It won't work unless you set in the SQL full text server the LANGUAGE TO NEUTRAL and rebuild indexes. |
The underscore character is never indexed, but converted into a space. Therefore, when the system indexes the string 1612_cremoSpo43_A01 it gets indexed indeed as 1612 cremoSpo43 A01" (as three distinct words). It affects all searches with the All operator (as it founds whole words). Therefore, when you search for _A01 with the All operator, you're indeed searching for A01 as a whole word. The same applies if you search for _A01_. When you search for Spo43_A01 with the All operator, you're indeed searching for Spo43 A01 Have in mind that the SOME operator finds also incomplete words. The NEAR operator finds only whole words. |
See also
http://tech.teradp.com/tech/download/exalead/doc/