Refining Your Search
It's easy to refine a query to get precisely the
results you want. Here are some effective techniques to try:
Identify a phrase.
| Before: |
home run records |
| After: |
"home run" records |
The
before query is ambiguous. Is it looking for the home
page of songs like "Run, Run, Run" or baseball statistics?
Identifying "home run" as a phrase eliminates the ambiguity.
This is the most powerful query refinement technique.
Add a discriminating word or a phrase.
| Before: |
"home run" records |
| After: |
"home run" records baseball |
As before, the
before query is ambiguous. Adding
baseball
makes the query less ambiguous. You'll get more total matches
(because the query is broadened with an additional term), but
the relevance ranking will be better.
Capitalize when appropriate.
| Before: |
wired digital white house, baby bells, bill gates |
| After: |
Wired, Digital, White House, Baby Bells, Bill Gates |
These examples, when all lower case, have a variety of possible
interpretations. For example, without capitalization,
wired
could refer to electrical cables and not Wired Magazine.
baby
bells could refer to the Bells' children on the "Young
and the Restless." Capitalization reduces the ambiguity.
Be sure to place a comma between unrelated capitalized words,
since Infoseek treats adjacent capitalized words as if they formed
a single phrase. It is always a good idea to capitalize proper
names.
Use a require or reject operator (+,-).
| Before: |
Barney |
| After: |
Barney, +Smith -dinosaur |
Barney alone is ambiguous. It it looking for Smith Barney
investment information or cartoon dinosaur pages? You can use
the reject operator (the "minus" sign) to eliminate
the cartoon dinosaur interpretation. Or, you can require that
the word "Smith" be in the document. The
after
version above does both.
Use a field specifier.
| Before: |
Sun workstation |
| After: |
Sun workstation, site:sun.com, title:Ultra |
If you are looking for a particular page that you know the site
or title, use the
site: or
title: field specifier
to search for that the word or phrase in the site or title of
the page. See
Special Searches for
more information on field specifiers.