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A query to the can be made of two types of terms: single terms and phrases.

A single term is a single word such as "test" or "hello"

A phrase is a group of words surrounded by double quotes such as "hello dolly"

Multiple terms can be combined together with Boolean operators to form more complex queries (as described below).

Boolean Operations

Boolean operators allow you to apply Boolean logic to queries, requiring the presence or absence of specific terms or conditions in searches in order to match documents. The table below summarizes the Boolean operators supported.

AND or && Requires both terms on either side of the Boolean operator to be present for a match. The AND operator matches documents where both terms exist anywhere in the text of a single document. This is equivalent to an intersection using sets. The symbol && can be used in place of the word AND. To search for documents that contain "anal play" and "london" use either of the following queries:
"anal play" AND "london" or
"anal play" && "london"

NOT or ! The NOT operator excludes documents that contain the term after NOT. This is equivalent to a difference using sets. The symbol ! can be used in place of the word NOT. The following queries search for documents that contain the phrase "anal play" but do not contain the phrase "Oxford Circus":
"anal play" NOT "oxford circus" or
"anal play" ! "oxford circus"

OR or || Requires that either term (or both terms) be present for a match. The OR operator is the default conjunction operator. This means that if there is no Boolean operator between two terms, the OR operator is used. The OR operator links two terms and finds a matching document if either of the terms exist in a document. This is equivalent to a union using sets. The symbol || can be used in place of the word OR. To search for documents that contain either "anal play" or just "owo" use the query:
"anal play" owo. or
"anal play" OR owo

+ The + symbol (also known as the "required" operator) requires that the term after the + symbol exist somewhere in a field in at least one document in order for the query to return a match. For example, to search for documents that must contain "owo" and that may or may not contain "anal play" use the following query:
+owo "anal play"

- Prohibits the following term (that is, matches on fields or documents that do not include that term). The - operator is functionally similar to the Boolean operator !. Because it’s used by popular search engines such as Google, it may be more familiar to some user communities. For example, to search for documents that contain "anal play" but not "oxford circus," use the following query:
"anal play" -"Oxford Circus"

Sub Queries

This can be very useful if you want to control the Boolean logic for a query. The query below searches for either "anal play" or "owo" and "Oxford Circus":
("anal play" OR owo) AND "Oxford Circus

Wildcard Searches

Wildcard characters can be applied to single terms, but not to search phrases.

Single character (matches a single character)? The search string te?t would match both test and text.

Multiple characters (matches zero or more sequential characters) * The wildcard search: tes* would match test, testing, and tester. You can also use wildcard characters in the middle of a term. For example: te*t would match test and text. *est would match pest and test.

Fuzzy Searches

Fuzzy searches discover terms that are similar to a specified term without necessarily being an exact match. To perform a fuzzy search, use the tilde ~ symbol at the end of a single-word term. For example, to search for a term similar in spelling to "roam," use the fuzzy search: roam~

This search will match terms like roams, foam, & foams. It will also match the word "roam" itself.

An optional distance parameter specifies the maximum number of edits allowed, between 0 and 2, defaulting to 2. For example: roam~1 This will match terms like roams & foam - but not foams since it has an edit distance of "2".

Proximity Searches

To perform a proximity search, add the tilde character ~ and a numeric value to the end of a search phrase. For example, to search for a "anal" and "owo" within 10 words of each other in a document, use the search:
"anal owo"~10
The distance referred to here is the number of term movements needed to match the specified phrase. In the example above, if "anal" and "owo" were 10 spaces apart in a field, but "owo" appeared before "anal", more than 10 term movements would be required to move the terms together and position "owo" to the right of "anal" with a space in between.