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Our search engine supports the following operators:

+
A leading plus sign indicates that this word must be present in every row returned.
-
A leading minus sign indicates that this word must not be present in any row returned.
By default (when neither a plus or minus sign is specified) the word is optional, but the rows that contain it will be rated higher.
These two operators are used to change a word's contribution to the relevance value that is assigned to a row. The < operator decreases the contribution and the > operator increases it. See the example below.
( )
Parentheses are used to group words into subexpressions.
~
A leading tilde acts as a negation operator, causing the word's contribution to the row relevance to be negative. It's useful for marking noise words. A row that contains such a word will be rated lower than others, but will not be excluded altogether, as it would be with the - operator.
*
An asterisk is the truncation operator. Unlike the other operators, it should be appended to the word, not prepended.

And here are some examples:

apple banana
find rows that contain at least one of these words.
+apple +juice
... both words
+apple macintosh
... word ``apple'', but rank it higher if it also contain ``macintosh''
+apple -macintosh
... word ``apple'' but not ``macintosh''
+apple +(>pie <strudel)
... ``apple'' and ``pie'', or ``apple'' and ``strudel'' (in any order), but rank ``apple pie'' higher than ``apple strudel''.
apple*
... ``apple'', ``apples'', ``applesauce'', and ``applet''

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