March 05, 2011
20 Tips for More Efficient Google Searches
For millions of people Google is an indispensable search tool that they use every day, in all facets of their lives. From work or school, research, to looking up movies and celebrities to news and gossip, Google is the go-to search engine.But instead of just typing in a phrase and wading through page after page of results, there are a number of ways to make your searches more efficient.
Some of these are obvious ones, that you probably know about. But others are lesser-known, and others are known but not often used. Use this guide to learn more about, or be reminded of, some of the best ways to get exactly what youâre looking for, and quickly.
- Either/or. Google normally searches for pages that contain all the words you type in the search box, but if you want pages that have one term or another (or both), use the OR operator â" or use the â|â symbol (pipe symbol) to save you a keystroke. [dumb | little | man]
- Quotes. If you want to search for an exact phrase, use quotes. ["dumb little man"] will only find that exact phrase. [dumb "little man"] will find pages that contain the word dumb and the exact phrase âlittle manâ.
- Not. If you donât want a term or phrase, use the â-â symbol. [-dumb little man] will return pages that contain âlittleâ and âmanâ but that donât contain âdumbâ.
- Similar terms. Use the â~â symbol to return similar terms. [~dumb little man -dumb] will get you pages that contain âfunny little manâ and âstupid little manâ but not âdumb little manâ.
- Wildcard. The â*â symbol is a wildcard. This is useful if youâre trying to find the lyrics to a song, but canât remember the exact lyrics. [can't * me love lyrics] will return the Beatles song youâre looking for. Itâs also useful for finding stuff only in certain domains, such as
educational information: ["dumb little man" research *.edu]. - Advanced search. If you canât remember any of these operators, you can always use Googleâs advanced search.
- Definitions. Use the âdefine:â operator to get a quick definition. [define:dumb] will give you a whole host of definitions from different sources, with links.
- Calculator. One of the handiest uses of Google, type in a quick calculation in the search box and get an answer. Itâs faster than calling up your computerâs calculator in most cases. Use the +, -, *, / symbols and parentheses to do a simple equation.
- Numrange. This little-known feature searches for a range of numbers. For example, ["best books 2002..2007] will return lists of best books for each of the years from 2002 to 2007 (note the two periods between the two numbers).
- Site-specific. Use the âsite:â operator to search only within a certain website. [site:dumblittleman.com leo] will search for the term âleoâ only within this blog.
- Backlinks. The âlink:â operator will find pages that link to a specific URL. You can use this not only for a main URL but even to a specific page. Not all links to an URL are listed, however.
- Vertical search. Instead of searching for a term across all pages on the web, search within a specialized field. Google has a number of specific searches, allowing you to search within blogs, news, books, and much more:
- Movies. Use the âmovie:â operator to search for a movie title along with either a zip code or U.S. city and state to get a list of movie theaters in the area and show times.
- Music. The âmusic:â operator returns content related to music only.
- Unit converter. Use Google for a quick conversion, from yards to meters for example, or different currency: [12 meters in yards]
- Types of numbers: Google algorithms can recognize patterns in numbers you enter, so you can search for:
- Telephone area codes
- Vehicle ID number (US only)
- Federal Communications Commission (FCC) equipment numbers (US only)
- UPC codes
- Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) airplane registration number (US only)
- Patent numbers (US only)
- Even stock quotes (using the stock symbol) or a weather forecast regarding the next five days
- File types. If you just want to search for .PDF files, or Word documents, or Excel spreadsheets, for example, use the âfiletype:â operator.
- Location of term. By default, Google searches for your term throughout a web page. But if you just want it to search certain locations, you can use operators such as âinurl:â, âintitle:â, âintext:â, and âinanchor:â. Those search for a term only within the URL, the title,
the body text, and the anchor text (the text used to describe a link). - Cached pages. Looking for a version of a page the Google stores on its own servers? This can help with outdated or update pages. Use the âcached:â operator.
- Answer to life, the universe, and everything. Search for that phrase, in lower case, and Google will give you the answer.
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