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Search
Tips
* Check spelling - Make sure your search terms are spelt correctly.
The search engine will attempt to find words that sound similar
to your search terms - but it is always best to spell the search
terms correctly.
*
Use multiple words - This will return more refined results than
a search from a single word.
*
Use similar words - The more similar words you use in a search,
the more relevant results will be to the words that you are searching
for.
*
Use appropriate capitalisation - Capitalise proper nouns such
as the name of a person. Lowercase words will match any words
of any case.
*
Use quotation marks to force exact matches. For example, search
for "Cheltenham & Cotswold".
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Use Boolean plus (+) or minus (-) operators - Precede a search
term or phrase with a plus (+) sign to indicate it must appear
in a search result. Precede a search term with a minus (-) sign
to indicate an undesirable search term or phrase that must not
appear in a search result. For example, searching for +Goa -interhash
will return results that are about Goa, but not about interhash.
*
Use field searches - Field searches allow you to search for words
that appear in a specific part of a document such as the body
text (body:), title text (title:), alt text (alt:), meta description
(desc:), meta keywords (keys:) or URL (url:). The field name should
include the colon and precede the search word or phrase with no
spaces between them. For example, searching for title:events will
find pages with events in the title of the page.
*
Use Wildcards - Wildcard searches can expand the number of matches
for a particular request. The * character is used as the wildcard
character. For instance, searching for *day will find the words,
Monday, Tuesday etc.
For
further advice click here
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