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300 Best Boolean Strings: One Page Tip Sheet: Google Boolean Syntax

This tip sheet contains Google search operators for finding information by domain, title, URL, file type, and related sites. Some key operators are site: to search a domain, intitle: and inurl: to search titles and URLs, filetype: for file formats, and related: for similar sites. It is part of the book "300 Best Boolean Strings" and references other guides to Google search syntax.

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Adnan Yousaf
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
587 views1 page

300 Best Boolean Strings: One Page Tip Sheet: Google Boolean Syntax

This tip sheet contains Google search operators for finding information by domain, title, URL, file type, and related sites. Some key operators are site: to search a domain, intitle: and inurl: to search titles and URLs, filetype: for file formats, and related: for similar sites. It is part of the book "300 Best Boolean Strings" and references other guides to Google search syntax.

Uploaded by

Adnan Yousaf
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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300 Best Boolean Strings

One Page Tip Sheet: Google Boolean Syntax

This tip sheet contains the most useful Google search operators and is part of the new e-book “300 Best Boolean Strings” by
Irina Shamaeva (January 2016).

Google’s Help provides a partial list of Google operators. See the references at the end of the tip sheet for alternative Google
search syntax descriptions.

Boolean Logic (AND, OR, NOT) Operators


There is no AND. Don’t use it in searching. By default, Google will combine search terms: [apples oranges].
OR (must be capitalized) and | (vertical bar) are the same: [apples OR oranges], [apples | oranges].
Instead of NOT, use a minus (-) immediately before the term or phrase to exclude: [apples -oranges].

Google: Special Characters


"" around a word ("manager") excludes synonyms; around several words searches for a phrase ("solid state")
.. ("Numrange") searches for numbers within an interval: [20..110] (use one number as min or max: [20..])
The asterisk (*) stands for one or a few words ("fill in the blanks"); example: ["fill * * blanks"]
Most special characters (such as @ and parentheses) are ignored, in most cases

Google Search Operators (written in lower case, then, colon; then, specific arguments, no space in-between)
site: (also called X-Raying) - Look for results from a given domain
[site:edu] search websites that end in EDU
[site:nih.gov] search the National Institute of Health website
[site:zoominfo.com/p] search for profile pages on Zoominfo
intitle: Search for keywords or phrases in the title of a web page (blue text in Google search results):
[intitle:"about us"] the phrase "About Us" must appear in the page title
[intitle:"member directory" bar association] adding keywords to intitle: search
inurl: Search for keywords or phrases in page URL’s (shown as green text in Google search results):
[inurl:careers] the word “careers” must appear in the URL
[inurl:resume quality assurance engineer automated tests in Perl -sample] adding keywords to inurl: search
intext: Search for keywords or phrases in the text of a web page (not in the title or URL).
[intext:gmail.com]
filetype: (can also be written as ext:) - search for a specified file type, such as PDF, DOC, TXT, or XLS:
[filetype:pdf] PDF files
[filetype:xls] (older versions), or [filetype:xlsx] (newer versions) Excel files
related: Find sites that are "similar" to the given site.
[related:target.com] (finds company competitors)
[related:pipl.com] (finds similar tools)
Alternative Google Tip Sheets
Advanced Power Searching Skills Quick Reference (slightly outdated; by Dan Russel of Google)

Google’s Advanced Search Operators (October 2015, by Dan Russel)


Selected Google Commands (by Karen Blakeman)

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