Να γιατί δυσκολεύεσαι να βρείς αυτό που ψάχνεις στο Google
Το google δημιουργήθηκε για να είναι το εργαλείο που μας βοηθά να αναζητήσουμε και να βρούμε αυτό που ψάχνουμε, κάνοντας όμως μια αναζήτηση σήμερα μας επιστρέφει τόσα αποτελέσματα που πολλές φορές η αναζήτηση μας καταλήγει σε μια πολύ επίπονη εργασία. Μήπως όμως δεν το χρησιμοποιούμε σωστά;
Παρακάτω σε αυτό το άρθρο αναφέρουμε κάποια απλά "κόλπα" που έχουν προσθέσει οι δημιουργεί του για μια εύκολη και στοχευμένη αναζήτηση. Μπορούμε πολύ εύκολα να καθορίσουμε τι ακριβώς γράφουμε στην αναζήτηση. Για παράδειγμα μπορούμε να πούμε οτι αυτό που θέλω να αναζητήσω είναι μια ιστοσελίδα, ή είναι ένας τίτλος άρθρου, ή είναι ένα όνομα αρχείου κτλ Πιο συγκεκριμένα θα αναφερθούμε στην παρακάτω λίστα.
- Αναζήτηση συγκεκριμένων λέξεων και φράσεων
- Αναζήτηση κάποιας ιστοσελίδας
- Παρόμοιες αναζητήσεις
- Calculator
- Ορισμός λέξεων
- Αριθμομηχανή
Exact Words and Phrases
One of the most basic and widely known search tricks is using quotation marks to search for an exact phrase. For example, perform the following search and you’ll only get pages that contain the word “Hello” followed by the word “World.”
“Hello World”
This same method now works for exact-word queries. For example, if you search for “mining,” Google will also show pages that contain the words “miners.” Previously, you’d use a plus sign and search for +mining, but now you have to enclose the word in quotes:
“mining”
Excluding a Word
The minus sign allows you to specify words that shouldn’t appear in your results. For example, if you’re looking for pages about Linux distributions that don’t mention Ubuntu, use the following search:
linux distributions -ubuntu
Site Search
The site: operator allows you to perform a search in a specific site. Let’s say you’re looking for information on Windows 7 on How-To Geek. You could use the following search
site:howtogeek.com windows 7
You can also use the site: operator to specify a domain. For example, if you’re looking for high-quality references, you could use site:.edu to only pull up results from .edu domains.
Related Words
The tilde (~) operator is the opposite of enclosing a single word in quotes — it searches for related words, not just the word you type. For example, if you ran the following search, you’d find search results with words similar to “geek”:
~geek
Apparently, “Linux” is the most similar word to geek, followed by “Greek.” “Nerd” comes in third. (Hey, no one ever said Google was perfect.)
The Wildcard
The asterisk (*) is a wildcard that can match any word. For example, if you wanted to see what companies Google has purchased and how much they paid, you could use this search:
“google purchased * for * dollars”
Time Ranges
A little-known search operator allows you to specify a specific time range. For example, use the following search to find results about Ubuntu from between 2008 and 2010:
ubuntu 2008..2010
File Type
The filetype: operator lets you search for files of a specific file type. For example, you could search for only PDF files.
filetype:pdf how to geek
One Word or the Other
The “OR” operator lets you find words that contain one term or another. For example, using the following search will pull up results that contain either the word “Ubuntu” or the word “Linux.” The word “OR” must be in uppercase.
ubuntu OR linux
Word Definitions
You don’t have to Google a word and look for a dictionary link if you want to see its definition. Use the following search trick and you’ll see an inline definition:
define:word
Calculator
Use Google instead of pulling one out or launching a calculator app. Use the +, -, * and / symbols to specify arithmetic operations. You can also use brackets for more complicated expressions. Here’s an example:
(4 + 2) * (6 / 3)
Unit Conversions
The calculator can also convert between units. Just type “X [units] in [units]”. Here’s an example:
5 nautical miles in kilometers
Combine these search operators to create more complex queries. Want to search a specific website for a PDF file, created between 2001 and 2003, that contains a specific phrase but not another phrase? Go ahead.
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