How to use search like a pro: 10 tips and tricks for Google and beyond
- January 15th, 2016
Can’t find what you’re looking for? These tips will turn you into a searching pro.
Photograph: Chris Ison/PA
So here are some tips for better googling (as it’s the most popular search engine) but many will work on other search engines too.
1. Exact phrase
Exact search Photograph: Samuel Gibbs for the Guardian
For instance, searching for Joe Bloggs will show results with both Joe and Bloggs but not necessarily placed sequentially. Searching for “Joe Bloggs” will surface only those that specifically have the name Joe Bloggs somewhere on the page.
The exact or explicit phrase search is very useful for excluding more common but less relevant results.
2. Exclude terms
“Joe Bloggs” -jeans Photograph: Samuel Gibbs for the Guardian
A search for “Joe Bloggs” -jeans will find results for Joe Bloggs, but it will exclude those results for the Joe Bloggs brand of jeans.
3. Either OR
OR search for things that could be one thing or another, but you don’t
need both terms to exist on a single page. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs for the Guardian
4. Synonym search
Searching using synonyms helps cover all bases. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs for the Guardian
Searching for plumbing ~university will bring up results for plumbing from colleges as well as universities, for example.
5. Search within a site
Use Google to search a particular site. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs for the Guardian
Searching with site:theguardian.com followed by a search term, will find results from only theguardian.com. Combining with explicit search terms makes it even more powerful.
6. The power of the asterisk
Asterisks work as wildcards within search either to replace a word or letters. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs for the Guardian
A search for architect* will search for architect, but also architectural, architecture, architected, architecting and any other word which starts with architect.
7. Searching between two values
British prime minister 1920.. 1950 Photograph: Samuel Gibbs for the Guardian
That’s your search term followed by two full stops and a space.
8. Search for word in the body, title or URL of a page
intitle: search Photograph: Samuel Gibbs for the Guardian
For example, intitle:review will bring up all the articles with “review” in the page title.
9. Search for related sites
Related search. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs for the Guardian
10. Combine them
Combine the terms and modifiers for powerful searches. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs for the Guardian
As Google and other search engines improve their understanding of the way people naturally type or say search queries, these power tools will likely become less and less useful – at least that’s the goal that search engines are working towards – but that’s certainly not the case at the moment.
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