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Writing a query is a way to ask a question about a subject. The way you ask questions in the form of queries determines which documents will be returned. The simplest way is to enter words that describe the subject you are interested in. The information below introduces how to write queries using Verity search features, and covers:

  • How to write basic queries
  • How to incorporate Verity operators
  • Query examples


  • Basic Queries

    You can write a basic query using words and phrases, separated by commas. If you want to see documents about torts, you can start with a single-word query, such as:

    tort

    In this case, your query finds all the documents that include the word "tort." (You don't have to specify the plural form, because a basic search includes stemmed variations, such as "torts.")

    Documents about torts that did not include the word "tort" would not be retrieved. To ask for more specific results, you could enter several words or phrases, separated by commas, that describe the subject more precisely, such as: tort law, web, Internet

    In this case, your query finds documents that contain "tort law," "web," or "Internet."(Case doesn't matter in queries: a word entered in lower case will match words in upper case, lower case, or mixed case.) The most relevant documents will appear at the top of the results list.

    Using Operators
    You can make your queries more specific by combining the words you used for basic queries with operators. Operators are special words that are used to indicate logical relationships between the descriptive terms that make up your query.

    Basic Operators
    Here are basic operators that you can specify as part of queries:

    AND Finds documents containing both words it joins.

    OR Finds documents containing either of the words it joins.

    NOT Finds documents containing the word preceding it and excludes documents containing the word that follows it.

    (NEAR) Finds documents containing words that are in the same general area, but may or may not be adjacent.

    (PHRASE) Finds documents containing phrases, words that are adjacent to each other.

    , (comma) Finds documents containing at least one of the words specified, ranking them using "the more, the better" approach, so documents with the most evidence of the words searched for are given the highest rank.

    NOTE: AND, OR, and NOT are treated as operators by default, and do not require brackets. If you want to use them as literal words, place them in double quotes. All other operators must be placed within brackets.

    ? Wildcard operator that represents any one character. You can use a ? to specify the first letter of a word.

    * Wildcard operator that represents one or more characters.You cannot use a * to specify the first letter of a word.

    ' (single quotes) Placing a word in single quotation marks finds stemmed variations of the word. Example: the query 'mail' finds "mail," "mailed," and "mailing."

    " (double quotes) Placing a word in double quotation marks finds exact matches only, excluding stemmed variations of the word. Example: the query "mail" matches the word "mail" only, not the words "mailed" or "mailing."

    (THESAURUS) Thesaurus operator that searches for documents containing words that are synonyms for the word you specify. Example: the query altitude retrieves documents that include the words "height" and "elevation," as well as "altitude."

    Query Examples

    Using these examples, you can write queries that will return exactly the information you want.

    Finding Words
    Most queries can be written by entering the words and phrases you're interested in, separated by commas. If you were looking for information about the Web or about torts, you could enter:

    web, torts

    This query returns documents that contain the terms "Web" (case doesn't matter in queries), "torts," or both. Your results list will display a ranked list of documents, with the most relevant documents at the top of the list.

    Finding Phrases
    Perhaps you want to see documents that refer to a series of words that occur in a specific order. You could enter the whole phrase. This query returns only documents that contain all of these words in the exact sequence you specified, including stemmed variations of the search terms.

    Finding a Specific Subject
    The simple query returned some documents about the Web, some documents about torts, and some about both subjects. If your real interest is in torts and the Web, you can use the AND operator to be more specific. You could enter:

    web AND torts

    This query returns only those documents that contain both "Web" and "torts" in the same document, so this list will be shorter than the results of the query written using commas. (You can enter AND in lower case and it will still be treated as an operator.) AND is treated as an operator unless it is surrounded by quotation marks. So if you want to use the word "and" as part of a phrase, place it inside quotation marks. For example, to search for the phrase "questions and comments", you would enter: questions "and" comments

    Excluding Terms
    You might want to specifically exclude certain documents from your results list. For example, you might want to see documents about torts, but you're not interested in the web. You could enter:

    web NOT torts

    This query returns only documents referring to torts that do not also mention web. If a document includes both "torts" and "web," it will be excluded.

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