Difference between revisions of "Help:Searching"

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* Click the '''Search''' button to search for all instances of the search terms you've typed. (For example, you may want to see all articles containing the word 'pronoun' rather than go straight to the '[[pronoun]]' article; or indeed, the '[[article]]' article.)
 
* Click the '''Search''' button to search for all instances of the search terms you've typed. (For example, you may want to see all articles containing the word 'pronoun' rather than go straight to the '[[pronoun]]' article; or indeed, the '[[article]]' article.)
  
Search results show pages whose titles contain the search words, followed by pages whose text contains them.
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The search results shows articles whose titles contain the search words, followed by articles whose text contains them.
  
 
== What to search for ==
 
== What to search for ==
Pages are usually titled in the same way a dictionary would classify an article. For example, the page about nouns is '[[noun]]', and '[[malapropism]]' will tell you what one is.
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Articles are usually titled in the same way a dictionary would classify it. For example, the page about nouns is '[[noun]]', '[[malapropism]]' will tell you what one is, and '[[-ing]]' will tell you about that suffix.
  
Pages about several words (these usually clarify common confusions) can be reached by searching for any of the individual words. You'll find help on the difference between [[Flaunt - flout|flaut and flout]] whether you search for 'flaut' or 'flout'.
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Articles about several words (these usually clarify common confusions or spelling errors) can be reached by searching for any of the individual words. You'll find help on the difference between [[Flaunt - flout|flaut and flout]] whether you search for 'flaut' or 'flout'.
  
 
== Limitations ==
 
== Limitations ==
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However, these short or common words are often precisely the ones that readers may be interested in! (There's a lot to be said about '[[and]]' or '[[its]]'.)
 
However, these short or common words are often precisely the ones that readers may be interested in! (There's a lot to be said about '[[and]]' or '[[its]]'.)
  
Because pages exist with precisely these titles, you can jump straight to them with the '''Go''' button. However, using the Search button will give no results.
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Because articles exist with precisely these titles, you can jump straight to them with the '''Go''' button. However, using the Search button will give no results.
  
 
== More help ==
 
== More help ==
 
See [[Help:Contents]].
 
See [[Help:Contents]].

Revision as of 16:39, 16 June 2007

The search box appears down the left hand side of every page. You can type in a single word you want help on or several words to search for.

You may want a quick answer to an immediate question, perhaps as a result of proof-reading an assignment, or a question about a particular word. Sometimes the article that might help you best would be about the prefix or suffix of the word, such as -ing.

The search box has two buttons:

  • Click the Go button or press Enter to go directly to the article whose title matches what you've typed, if it exists. (If not, you'll get search results.)
  • Click the Search button to search for all instances of the search terms you've typed. (For example, you may want to see all articles containing the word 'pronoun' rather than go straight to the 'pronoun' article; or indeed, the 'article' article.)

The search results shows articles whose titles contain the search words, followed by articles whose text contains them.

What to search for

Articles are usually titled in the same way a dictionary would classify it. For example, the page about nouns is 'noun', 'malapropism' will tell you what one is, and '-ing' will tell you about that suffix.

Articles about several words (these usually clarify common confusions or spelling errors) can be reached by searching for any of the individual words. You'll find help on the difference between flaut and flout whether you search for 'flaut' or 'flout'.

Limitations

The search engine deliberately ignores common words that occur very frequently. These include short words and words like "have" or "from".

However, these short or common words are often precisely the ones that readers may be interested in! (There's a lot to be said about 'and' or 'its'.)

Because articles exist with precisely these titles, you can jump straight to them with the Go button. However, using the Search button will give no results.

More help

See Help:Contents.