Advanced Searching

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Advanced Searching

There are two ways to query a Concordance Desktop database: full-text and relational. Each method has a distinct purpose in locating information efficiently. But both methods can be combined and used in the Quick Search bar and the Advanced Search panel.

Full-text searching is the faster search method in Concordance Desktop, enabling you to examine the contents of free-text paragraph fields using words and phrases with various search operators and parameters narrowing the query results. Relational searching is used to query fixed fields, most commonly defined as numeric, date, or fixed-length text. One of Concordance’s most powerful features is its ability to combine these search methods, allowing you to search both field types at once — saving critical review process time by maximizing your query potential.

Searching Benefits:  Full-Text versus Relational

Full-text

Relational

Searches the dictionary, uses index to display words from dictionary search

Searches the database in real time

Very fast

Slower (depending on size of database)

Highlights hits in red

Does not highlight hits

Can only be used to search indexed fields

Can search any field, indexed or not

Easy to search multiple fields at once

Searches one field at a time (Unless fields groups are established in the .INI file)

Used more often to find words

Used more often to find dates, numbers, ranges, comparisons

Cannot be used on date fields

Can find specific dates or a range of dates within limits or outside limits

Often used on paragraph fields

Normally used on paragraph fields only to find empty/not empty fields

OCR1 EQ "" finds empty fields

OCR1 NE "" finds populated fields

Cannot be used until the database has been indexed. Will not find new data until database has been reindexed.

Can be used whether or not the database has been indexed

Cannot be used to find stopwords, since they are not in the dictionary

Can be used to find stopwords

Uses the * wildcard character.

Can be used before or after the word.

Uses the * wildcard character only at the end of a word. Use the ? wildcard character, to replace a single character in the middle of a word and in data searches.

Always searches the complete contents of paragraph fields

Only searches the complete contents of paragraph fields when using CO and NC operators

In the Browse view, you can distinguish between the different fields:

Non-paragraph fields are preceded with an equal sign =

Paragraph fields are preceded with a colon :