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Windows Search 4 - Wildcard in file content

 
 
Ken-T
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      09-22-2009
Hi,

firstly, apologies if this post lands in the wrong groups.

Have Windows Search 4 in use under XP pro. Works rather nicely - but -
although I can use wildcards such as "*" for file names - use of wildcards
for words contained in file content does not work for the word begining.

So, in a content search, bana* will find banana
but
*nana will NOT find banana.

Am unsure if this is by design or if I am goofing somewhere.
Could anyone please advise?


 
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Retroman
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      09-22-2009
On Tue, 22 Sep 2009 02:02:01 -0700, Ken-T <>
wrote:

>Have Windows Search 4 in use under XP pro. Works rather nicely - but -
>although I can use wildcards such as "*" for file names - use of wildcards
>for words contained in file content does not work for the word begining.
>
>So, in a content search, bana* will find banana
>but
>*nana will NOT find banana.
>
>Am unsure if this is by design or if I am goofing somewhere.
>Could anyone please advise?


Hello Ken,

This is by design. Windows Search is now word-based and content searches
work from left to right. Try searching on the whole word that contains
the string and then add other criteria to filter the results by date,
location, file extension or whatever is appropriate.

Doug M. in NJ
 
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Ken-T
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      09-22-2009

Hi Doug,

thanks for that. It's enough to know it was by design and that I was just
not finding the right search format or something.
This particular need for a wildcard couldn#t really be solved by ading to
the search (unless you know of some methoid).

In the docs were Mr.F.Jones (names changed to protect the innocent).
Yes, the user created the docs with no space between..... so since nobody
could remember the first name was tring for *jones mr*jones etc etc

Anyway. Thanks.


"Retroman" wrote:

> On Tue, 22 Sep 2009 02:02:01 -0700, Ken-T <>
> wrote:
>
> >Have Windows Search 4 in use under XP pro. Works rather nicely - but -
> >although I can use wildcards such as "*" for file names - use of wildcards
> >for words contained in file content does not work for the word begining.
> >
> >So, in a content search, bana* will find banana
> >but
> >*nana will NOT find banana.
> >
> >Am unsure if this is by design or if I am goofing somewhere.
> >Could anyone please advise?

>
> Hello Ken,
>
> This is by design. Windows Search is now word-based and content searches
> work from left to right. Try searching on the whole word that contains
> the string and then add other criteria to filter the results by date,
> location, file extension or whatever is appropriate.
>
> Doug M. in NJ
>

 
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Retroman
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      09-22-2009
On Tue, 22 Sep 2009 06:47:01 -0700, Ken-T <>
wrote:

>Hi Doug,
>
>thanks for that. It's enough to know it was by design and that I was just
>not finding the right search format or something.
>This particular need for a wildcard couldn#t really be solved by ading to
>the search (unless you know of some methoid).
>
>In the docs were Mr.F.Jones (names changed to protect the innocent).
>Yes, the user created the docs with no space between..... so since nobody
>could remember the first name was tring for *jones mr*jones etc etc
>
>Anyway. Thanks.
>

Your quite welcome, Ken. In the example you give, did you try searching
on simply "Jones" , with no wild cards? I would expect that to work. Text
following a period should be interpreted as the start of a word.

Doug M. in NJ
 
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Ken-T
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      09-23-2009
Hi again,


yes, I did test for simply "jones" but there are no finds.
(I suspected that some punctuation counts as a delimiter and found/used
examples during tests, mainly for numbers).
The odd thing is, if I test with a document containing mr,f,jones with
commas instead of periods then yes, it finds "jones"!

Erm.... any ideas?

Thanks.
Ken

"Retroman" wrote:

> On Tue, 22 Sep 2009 06:47:01 -0700, Ken-T <>
> wrote:
>
> >Hi Doug,
> >
> >thanks for that. It's enough to know it was by design and that I was just
> >not finding the right search format or something.
> >This particular need for a wildcard couldn#t really be solved by ading to
> >the search (unless you know of some methoid).
> >
> >In the docs were Mr.F.Jones (names changed to protect the innocent).
> >Yes, the user created the docs with no space between..... so since nobody
> >could remember the first name was tring for *jones mr*jones etc etc
> >
> >Anyway. Thanks.
> >

> Your quite welcome, Ken. In the example you give, did you try searching
> on simply "Jones" , with no wild cards? I would expect that to work. Text
> following a period should be interpreted as the start of a word.
>
> Doug M. in NJ
>

 
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Guest
Posts: n/a

 
      09-23-2009
File names are indexed forward and backward so *search and search* both
work, but not contents.

--
..
--
"Ken-T" <> wrote in message
news:70327C37-04C3-476A-B6B7-...
> Hi again,
>
>
> yes, I did test for simply "jones" but there are no finds.
> (I suspected that some punctuation counts as a delimiter and found/used
> examples during tests, mainly for numbers).
> The odd thing is, if I test with a document containing mr,f,jones with
> commas instead of periods then yes, it finds "jones"!
>
> Erm.... any ideas?
>
> Thanks.
> Ken
>
> "Retroman" wrote:
>
>> On Tue, 22 Sep 2009 06:47:01 -0700, Ken-T
>> <>
>> wrote:
>>
>> >Hi Doug,
>> >
>> >thanks for that. It's enough to know it was by design and that I was
>> >just
>> >not finding the right search format or something.
>> >This particular need for a wildcard couldn#t really be solved by ading
>> >to
>> >the search (unless you know of some methoid).
>> >
>> >In the docs were Mr.F.Jones (names changed to protect the innocent).
>> >Yes, the user created the docs with no space between..... so since
>> >nobody
>> >could remember the first name was tring for *jones mr*jones etc etc
>> >
>> >Anyway. Thanks.
>> >

>> Your quite welcome, Ken. In the example you give, did you try
>> searching
>> on simply "Jones" , with no wild cards? I would expect that to work.
>> Text
>> following a period should be interpreted as the start of a word.
>>
>> Doug M. in NJ
>>


 
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Donald Lessau
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Posts: n/a

 
      09-23-2009

"Ken-T" <> schrieb im Newsbeitrag
news:20E6C706-6AFA-4FD5-8E03-...
> Hi,
>
> firstly, apologies if this post lands in the wrong groups.
>
> Have Windows Search 4 in use under XP pro. Works rather nicely - but -
> although I can use wildcards such as "*" for file names - use of wildcards
> for words contained in file content does not work for the word begining.
>
> So, in a content search, bana* will find banana
> but
> *nana will NOT find banana.


FYI, the content search of XYplorer allows wildcards, and bana* will find
banana.

Don
http://www.xyplorer.com/

 
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Retroman
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Posts: n/a

 
      09-23-2009
On Tue, 22 Sep 2009 23:50:01 -0700, Ken-T <>
wrote:

>Hi again,
>yes, I did test for simply "jones" but there are no finds.
>(I suspected that some punctuation counts as a delimiter and found/used
>examples during tests, mainly for numbers).
>The odd thing is, if I test with a document containing mr,f,jones with
>commas instead of periods then yes, it finds "jones"!
>
>Erm.... any ideas?


Ken,

Sorry, no. Content searches have limitations and this looks like one of
them.

Doug M. in NJ
 
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Ken-T
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      09-24-2009

Doug,

thanks indeed for the help.
Very often limitations can be lived with or worked aroung when you know it's
a limitation and not, simply a result of having not used correct syntax.

Ken

"Retroman" wrote:

> On Tue, 22 Sep 2009 23:50:01 -0700, Ken-T <>
> wrote:
>
> >Hi again,
> >yes, I did test for simply "jones" but there are no finds.
> >(I suspected that some punctuation counts as a delimiter and found/used
> >examples during tests, mainly for numbers).
> >The odd thing is, if I test with a document containing mr,f,jones with
> >commas instead of periods then yes, it finds "jones"!
> >
> >Erm.... any ideas?

>
> Ken,
>
> Sorry, no. Content searches have limitations and this looks like one of
> them.
>
> Doug M. in NJ
>

 
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