User Guide

Table Of Contents
588 Chapter 25: Using Verity Search Expressions
Search terms
In a search form enabled with the Internet query parser, users can enter words, phrases, and plain
language. The Internet parser does not support the Verity query language (VQL).
Words
To search for multiple words, separate them with spaces.
Phrases
To search for an exact phrase, surround it with double-quotation marks. A string of capitalized
words is assumed to be a name. Separate a series of names with commas. Commas arent needed
when the phrases are surrounded by quotation marks.
The following example searches for a document that contains the phrases “San Francisco” and
sourdough bread”:
"San Francisco" "sourdough bread"
Plain language
To search with plain language, enter a question or concept. The Internet Query Parser identifies
the important words and searches for them. For example, enter a question such as:
Where is the sales office in San Francisco?
This query produces the same results as entering:
sales office San Francisco
Including and excluding search terms
You can limit searches by excluding or requiring search terms, or by limiting the areas of the
document that are searched.
A minus sign (–) immediately preceding a search term (word or phrase) excludes documents
containing the term.
A plus sign (+) immediately preceding a search term (word or phrase) means returned documents
are guaranteed to contain the term.
If neither sign is associated with the search term, the results may include documents that do not
contain the specified term as long as they meet other search criteria.
Field searches
The Internet parser lets users perform field searches. The fields that are available for searching
depend on field extraction rules based on the document type of the documents in the collection.
To search a document field, type the name of the field, a colon (:), and the search term with no
spaces.
field:term