Search Results

Help with Searching

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Basic Search Help

Search is simple: just type whatever comes to mind in the search box and click the Search button.

Most of the time, you'll find exactly what you're looking for with just a basic query (the word or phrase you search for). However, the following tips can help you make the most of your searches. Throughout the article, we'll use square brackets [ ] to signal a search query, so [ black and white ] is one query, while [ black ] and [ white ] are two separate queries.For common searches, separate the search terms with a semicolon. Each successive search term will further limit your results. The terms do not have to appear together in the following examples as long as both terms appear in the same document it will be returned by the search.

Search Examples:

[Relo]will give you all the RELO cases (or [Trav] for travel cases)
[Relo; James]will give you all the RELO cases including the word "James"
[Relo; James; Thomas]will give you all the RELO cases including "James" and "Thomas"
[Relo; James; Thomas; KY]will give you all the RELO cases including "James" "Thomas" and "KY"

Some basic facts

To make sure that your CBCA searches return the most relevant results, there are some exceptions to the rules above.

Tips for better searches

The search results page

CBCA's goal is to provide you with results that are clear and easy to read. A basic search result will include a title that links to the webpage, a short description or an actual excerpt from the webpage, and the page's URL.

More Search Tips

This document will highlight the more advanced features of CBCA Web Search. Have in mind though that even very advanced searchers, such as the members of the search group at CBCA, use these features less than 5% of the time. Basic simple search is often enough. As always, we use square brackets [ ] to denote queries, so [ to be or not to be ] is an example of a query; [ to be ] or [ not to be ] are two examples of queries.

Exceptions

Search is rarely absolute. Search engines use a variety of techniques to imitate how people think and to approximate their behavior. As a result, most rules have exceptions. For example, the query [ for better or for worse ] will not be interpreted by CBCA as an OR query, but as a phrase that matches a comic strip. CBCA will show calculator results for the query [ 34 * 87 ] rather than use the 'Fill in the blanks' operator. Both cases follow the obvious intent of the query. Here is a list of exceptions to some of the rules and guidelines that were mentioned.

Exceptions to 'Every word matters'

Punctuation that is not ignored

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