What terms and wildcards can I use to narrow my search?

Use these guidelines to help create effective searches.

Single term
Single-term searches look for all search results that match the search text. For example, a search entry of doc only returns search results of "doc".
Multiple terms
Multiple-term searches look for all search results that match any of the words in the search text. For example, a search entry of document plan returns search results of "document", "test plan", and "document plan".
Phrase
A group of words surrounded by double quotes, such as "product requirements", returns only search results containing the entire phrase.
Boolean operators
Terms and phrases can be combined with boolean operators for more complex searches:
  • OR between two terms returns search results containing either of the terms. This is the default operator used if no other operator is specified.
  • AND between two terms returns only search results containing both of the terms.
  • The + operator before a term makes the term required. Only search results containing the terms are returned.
  • The - or NOT operator before a term returns only search results that do not contain the term.
  • The NEAR operator between two terms looks for the two terms close to each other.
Grouping
You can group boolean searches using parentheses. For example, (doc OR test) AND "plan" returns search results containing "doc plan" and "test plan".
Wildcard searches
To look for search results with a single character replaced, use the ? symbol. For example, to look for search results with "text" or "test", enter "te?t". You can use wildcard symbols in the middle or at the end of a search, but not as the first character of a search.
Fuzzy searches
To look for search results with spelling similar to the search term entered, use the ~ symbol as the last character of the search. For example, to look for search results with spelling similar to "roam", enter "roam~". This returns search results such as "foam" and "roams".
Special characters
If you have any of the following special characters in your search text, you must escape them by enclosing the entire phrase in double quotes. + - & || ! ( ) { } [ ] ^ " ~ * ? : \

For example, to look for search results containing the hyphenated term product-development, enter "product-development".

Excluded words
The following words are considered stop words and are not searchable on their own: a, an, and, are, as, at, be, but, by, for, if, in, into, is, it, no, not, of, on, or, s, such, t, that, the, their, then, there, these, they, this, to, was, will, with