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Searching the WWW Chapter 5
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Search Engines Software that lets a user specify search terms. The search engine then finds sites that contain those terms. Over time a search engine builds a database of searchable terms that can be matched to web sites.
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Search Engines (continued) Examples: (pg. 202) – www.lycos.com – www.google.com www.google.com PC World ranks as best – www.altavista.com www.altavista.com
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Query Terms entered into a form of a search engine’s web page. Not necessarily phrased as a question since words such as “what”, “a”, “is” etc. would be ignored. Enter specific keywords. Make sure your spelling is correct.
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Terms Hit (match) – URL returned by a search engine Relevancy score – Value indicating how close of a match it was to your query.
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Not all search engines are the same. Entering the same search query using different search engines will not produce the same list of sites. Each search engine uses a different method when it comes to doing a search.
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Not all search engines are the same. (continued) As a result, you should use more than one search engine in order to do a thorough search. Read the search rules of an individual search engine.
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Methods of searching Use more than one word. Use quotes Use boolean queries Use + sign or - sign Use * (wild card)
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Boolean Query AND, OR, NOT A AND B – results in sites containing both A and B A OR B – results in sites containing A or B, or both A and B A AND NOT B – results in sites containing A and excludes sites containing both A and B.
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+ sign or - sign Use + in order to include a word “A”, “and” or “the” -- such words are usually ignored by the search engine. To include, use +. Use - in order to exclude a word
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Stemming Some search engines will return results that include variations on the endings of words. computer computers computed
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Wild Card * Some search engines use the asterisk as a wild card to include variations on a word. kayak* would search for kayaks, kayaking, kayaker.
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Examples of possible search entries: shelf ice – Results in URLs of pages containing the words shelf and ice, or just the word “shelf” or just the word “ice”. – Results in many hits
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Using quotes “shelf ice” – results in URLs of pages containing the exact string “shelf ice”.
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Using boolean queries shelf AND ice – results in URLs of pages containing the word “shelf” and the word “ice” (in any order). shelf OR ice – Results in URLs of pages containing the words “shelf” and ”ice”, or just the word “shelf” or just the word “ice”. computers NOT notebook – Results in URLs of pages containing the word “computers” but not containing the word “notebook”.
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More examples: Elizabeth I – The “I” could be ignored. Elizabeth +I – The “I” would be included.
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Examples (continued) Using Google – notebook computers = ? results – “notebook computers” = ? results – notebook AND computers = ? results – notebook OR computers = ? results
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Metasearch Engines Performs a search by using more than one search engine to do the search. – www.metasearch.com – www.metacrawler.com – www.dogpile.com – www.infind.com Pg 206
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White Pages Used for finding individuals (pg. 207) – www.bigfoot.com – www.four11.com – www.whowhere.com
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Yellow Pages Used for finding businesses – http://www.superpages.com/
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Specialty Search Engines Used for specific topics – News, shopping, travel... – MySimon.com -- comparison shopping – MoreOver.com -- news – Travelocity.com -- airfares
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Too Few Hits Eliminate one or more keywords Try more general keywords Use a metasearch engine
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Too many hits Add more keywords May want to use “AND” and/or “NOT” May want to use + or - Capitalize proper nouns. Some search engines allow you to do a search within a search.
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4 Types of Links 1.Text Hyperlink 2.Image Hyperlink 3.Mailto Hyperlink – launches a mailer 4.Intra-document Link (Internal link) - links to another location within the same page.
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Helpful Tip #1 ! To quickly find what you are looking for within a web page, you can do a search for a word or words within the page by doing the following:
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To search for a word or words within a document Go to: Edit Find in Page Enter the word or words you are searching for. Click on “Find Next”.
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Helpful Tip #2 ! You can open a web page in a separate browser window in order to continue viewing the original web page, while that page loads.
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To open a web page in a new browser window. Right-mouse click on the link of interest and then select “Open in new window”. Click on the original browser window on the task bar below in order to continue viewing the original web page while that page loads. This speeds up your search since you can view one page while another is loading.
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To assist you in learning HTML, you can view other’s HTML. Right mouse-click on a web page (not on a link) Click on “View Source”
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