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- Google Adds
Wildcard Capabilities to Phrase Search
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- LLRXBuzz is reporting that Google
has added the ability to incorporate variables
into Google phrase searching through the use of
"wildcards." The LLRXBuzz report comes
from a tip from Invisible Web maven Gary
Price.
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- A wildcard is a
place-holder used to represent a variable, so
phrases with any word in the position of the
wildcard may be returned in search results.
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- According to the
report, an "*" asterisk may be inserted
in the phrase to represent a variable or missing
word. This can be particularly helpful when
looking for a person who often uses their middle
name - if you do not know their middle name. For
example, a search for the name "Robert
Downey" (which looks for the name as an
exact phrase) will return different results than
a search for "Robert * Downey" that
would also incorporate the actor's middle name.
(The latter search returns an online version of
an appellate decision related to the actor that
did not appear in the first search.)
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To read
more about recent additions to Google's
functionality, see these articles:
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