Difference between revisions of "Help:Searching"

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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.
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The quickest way to find information in AWE is to look it up directly. On the left-hand side of your screen there is a '''Search''' box with two buttons under it labeled "Go" and "Search".  
  
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 - perhaps one that has been marked as wrong. First, type the word itself in the '''search box'''.
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<div style="border:1px solid #ababff; background: #fdfdff; padding: 1em; margin: 1.1em 1em 1em 0em; font-size:105%">
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Type your keywords in the search box.
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* '''Go''' - (or ''Enter'' on keyboard) will take you automatically to the article, if it exists.
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* '''Search''' - will search the text of all pages on the wiki (with some restrictions, see below).
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</div>
  
Under the search box, there are two buttons.
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If you clicked '''Search''', or you clicked '''Go''' and the page you were looking for did not exist, you will be presented with a list of articles that matched your search criteria (or a message that no matches were found). If these exist, you will see up to two lists.  
* 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 a list of the best matches, in effect, as if you'd pressed the Search button - next.)
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*The first is of "Article '''title''' matches", which will present you with articles which contain the word(s) you are looking for. Scan these, and you may see what you want.
* 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.)
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*The second list is of "Page '''text''' matches", which lists the pages that contain the word(s) anywhere in the text. With words like 'form', which AWE uses a lot, there may be too many of these to be useful (currently 'form yields over 600 matches). For less common words, this list may be helpful.
  
The search results shows articles whose titles contain the search words, followed by articles whose text contains them.
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== How it works ==
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Here's how the search works:
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* Even if you enclose a phrase in quotes, the search looks for each word individually.  e.g. if you enter "world war 2" it will return pages that contain "world" and "war" and "2".
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* The search is not case-sensitive, so "MediaWiki", "mediawiki" and "MEDIAWIKI" all give the same result.
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* 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.
  
 
== What to search for ==
 
== What to search for ==
An article is usually labelled with a headword, in the same way as a dictionary would classify it. (If you enter a different form of the word, the search results will usually get you there: the results for '''correspondence''' include '''co-respondent - correspondent''', an article which will help you with the spelling and meaning of correspondence.)  For example, the page about nouns is '[[noun]]'; '[[malapropism]]' will tell you what one is; and '[[-ing]]' will tell you about that suffix.
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An article has a '''title''' as a dictionary has a headword. For example, the page about nouns is '[[noun]]'; '[[malapropism]]' will tell you what the word means; and '[[-ing]]' will guide you to [[Participle]]: the technical name in grammar for the commonest use of '-ing' is 'the present participle'. (This site also links to '[[verbal noun]]', the other main use of the suffix '-ing'.) If you enter a different form of the word, the search results will usually get you there: the results for '''correspondence''' include '''co-respondent - correspondent''', an article which will help you with the spelling and meaning of correspondence. Guidance about some words is mentioned in an article with a completely different title: such a link  should be shown in the '''Page text matches'''.
  
 
Some articles are about several words - these usually clarify common confusions or spelling errors. Such articles can be reached by searching for any of the individual words. You'll find help on the difference between [[Flaunt - flout|flaunt and flout]] whether you search for 'flaunt' or 'flout'.
 
Some articles are about several words - these usually clarify common confusions or spelling errors. Such articles can be reached by searching for any of the individual words. You'll find help on the difference between [[Flaunt - flout|flaunt and flout]] whether you search for 'flaunt' or 'flout'.
  
== Limitations ==
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There are also articles on more general topics, such as [[etymology]] or the spelling pattern [[-eign]]. Some such articles contain advice on particular examples of the phenomenon described in the general articles: a search for 'deign', for example, will take you to the '-eign' page.
The search engine deliberately ignores common words that occur very frequently. These include short words and words like "have" or "from".
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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]]'.)
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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.
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== More help ==
 
== More help ==
 
See [[Help:Contents]].
 
See [[Help:Contents]].
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<div style="border:1px solid #ababff; background: #ababff; padding: 1em; margin: 1.1em 1em 1em 0em; font-size:105%">
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This help page incorporates and adapts material from the [http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Help:Searching MediaWiki user manual] and its contents are released into the public domain.
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</div>

Latest revision as of 11:48, 9 February 2010

The quickest way to find information in AWE is to look it up directly. On the left-hand side of your screen there is a Search box with two buttons under it labeled "Go" and "Search".

Type your keywords in the search box.

  • Go - (or Enter on keyboard) will take you automatically to the article, if it exists.
  • Search - will search the text of all pages on the wiki (with some restrictions, see below).

If you clicked Search, or you clicked Go and the page you were looking for did not exist, you will be presented with a list of articles that matched your search criteria (or a message that no matches were found). If these exist, you will see up to two lists.

  • The first is of "Article title matches", which will present you with articles which contain the word(s) you are looking for. Scan these, and you may see what you want.
  • The second list is of "Page text matches", which lists the pages that contain the word(s) anywhere in the text. With words like 'form', which AWE uses a lot, there may be too many of these to be useful (currently 'form yields over 600 matches). For less common words, this list may be helpful.

How it works

Here's how the search works:

  • Even if you enclose a phrase in quotes, the search looks for each word individually. e.g. if you enter "world war 2" it will return pages that contain "world" and "war" and "2".
  • The search is not case-sensitive, so "MediaWiki", "mediawiki" and "MEDIAWIKI" all give the same result.
  • 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.

What to search for

An article has a title as a dictionary has a headword. For example, the page about nouns is 'noun'; 'malapropism' will tell you what the word means; and '-ing' will guide you to Participle: the technical name in grammar for the commonest use of '-ing' is 'the present participle'. (This site also links to 'verbal noun', the other main use of the suffix '-ing'.) If you enter a different form of the word, the search results will usually get you there: the results for correspondence include co-respondent - correspondent, an article which will help you with the spelling and meaning of correspondence. Guidance about some words is mentioned in an article with a completely different title: such a link should be shown in the Page text matches.

Some articles are about several words - these usually clarify common confusions or spelling errors. Such articles can be reached by searching for any of the individual words. You'll find help on the difference between flaunt and flout whether you search for 'flaunt' or 'flout'.

There are also articles on more general topics, such as etymology or the spelling pattern -eign. Some such articles contain advice on particular examples of the phenomenon described in the general articles: a search for 'deign', for example, will take you to the '-eign' page.

More help

See Help:Contents.


This help page incorporates and adapts material from the MediaWiki user manual and its contents are released into the public domain.