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Search Operators Chart |
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Operator | Example(s) | Explanation |
word
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copyright |
Returns all documents containing that word. Note that plural words are matched with singular words automatically (and vice versa). So searching for "contract" includes searching for "contracts" and "strategy" is considered the same as "strategies". Words and phrases are case insensitive. So "bob" is the same as "Bob" or "BOB". |
wildcards
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tax*
licen?e |
Returns all documents containing a word beginning with tax - this would include: tax, taxes, taxi, taxicab, taxation, taxable, taxing, taxidermy. Note: using the asterisk slows down searching significantly. Returns all documents containing the word "licence" or "license" including the plurals of those words. |
phrase
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moral rights |
Returns all documents containing that phrase. Note that quotes are not necessary, but if included, causes any search operators to be treated as regular words. For example "crime and punishment" (with the quotes) searches for that exact phrase. Without quotes the search will be for all documents with crime that also contain the word punishment (the two words not necessarily appearing next to each other). Note: excessive use of quotation marks slows down the search significantly. |
AND
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copyright AND moral rights |
Returns all documents that contain both the first term and the second term. A "term" can be a single word or complete phrase (no quotes are necessary around a phrase). Only works when your search is set to Boolean mode. |
OR
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treaties OR conventions |
Returns all documents that contain either the first term or the second term or both. A "term" can be a single word or complete phrase. Only works when your search is set to Boolean mode. Most useful when searching for synonyms of words. |
NOT
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love NOT war |
Finds documents that contain the first word, but do not contain the second. Occassionally useful to exclude irrelevant documents that contain unique words or titles. Only works in Boolean mode. You can also use "and not", for example "love and not war" (without the quotes of course). |
NEAR
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mabo NEAR queensland |
Returns all documents where the first term appears nearby the second term. "Near" corresponds to 50 words, which is intended to be roughly the size of a paragraph. If two words are close together, then the chance of them being related is increased. Only works when your search is set to Boolean mode. Useful when searching for references to case names. |
W/n
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mabo w/5 queensland |
Returns all documents where the first term appears within n words of the second term, where n is a number you specify. So you could use "mabo w/10 queensland", "mabo w/50 queensland" (same as using near) or "mabo w/100 queensland". If two words are clsoe together, then the chance of them being related is increased. Only works when your search is set to Boolean mode. Useful when searching for references to case names. |
PRE/n
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sentencing pre/5 statistics |
Returns all documents where the first term precedes the second term by no more than n words, where N is a number you specify. This means that the first term must come before the second term in the document, separated by no more than n words. Examples might be "sentencing pre/10 statistics", "sentencing pre/50 statistics" or "sentencing pre/100 statistics". Only works in Boolean mode. |
/n/
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smith/10/brown |
Finds documents where words and phrases appear within n words of each other (as in the old STATUS system), where n is a number you specify. Similar in function to W/n (see above). |
/m,n/
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smith/-10,10/brown smith/1,10/brown |
Finds documents where words and phrases appear somewhere within m to n words of each other. You can use a negative value for m to mean "this many words before the second" and a positive value to mean "this many words after the second". |
TITLE( ... )
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title(commonwealth) commonwealth@title But use: title(commonwealth bank) and not: commonwealth bank@title |
Limits the search to document titles only. The example will find all those files with the word "commonwealth" in the title. This only works in Boolean mode, and can be combined with other operators. The text inside the title can contain other operators as well. This is a valid search: "title(westpac OR suncorp) AND title(australian taxation office OR ATO)". |
punctuation
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[ ] { } ^ + - , |
See Full SINO Documentation for information on the special meaning of many symbols. As a general rule, omit all punctuation in your searches by replacing it with space characters, since some characters have a special meaning that could yield unpredictable results. |
Precedence |
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Default precedence rules:
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( crime and punishment ) or jail |
Normally, searches are evaluated left to right. There is a default precedence order (see SINO Precedence), but it is a good idea to force parts of your search to be evaluated first using round brackets. Note that the following searches are all different: "journalist AND defamation OR publish", "journalist AND (defamation OR publish)" and "(journalist AND defamation) OR publish". |