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Search Method Three different types of searching can be performed. FileBoss supports smart white space matching where the white space (spaces and tabs) does not have to be exact for a match to occur. This allows the search pattern to specify one space or tab and FileBoss will still match even if the source text contains two or more consecutive spaces or tabs or a mixture of both. The type of search to be done is specified by choosing on of the following options: Exact Matches the search pattern exactly (no wild cards have special meaning) except for capitalization and white space. Capitalization is controlled by the 'Match capitalization' check box and all white space is considered to be the same, e.g. spaces, tabs and new lines are considered to be the same. In addition multiple spaces will match one space and vice-a-versa. Normal In normal searching, FileBoss recognizes two wild card characters: the question mark and the asterisk. The question mark (?) matches any one character. The asterisk (*) matches any number of any characters up until the next character in the search pattern. For instance, the search pattern F*ss, would match FileBoss To enter an asterisk or question mark as literals, i.e. without special meaning, precede them with a backslash.
See Unix Style Searches for a complete definition of FileBoss's Unix style search implementation. Match Capitalization Selecting this option tells FileBoss that searches should be case sensitive. Thus, if this option is selected and "Blue" is searched for, FileBoss will find "Blue" but not "blue" or "bLue." If this option is not selected, FileBoss will match any combination of capitals and lowercase letters, no matter what was used for the search string. Note that this option does not affect searches when Unix mode is turned on. Pattern to Find Enter the test or pattern you are looking for or select a previously entered pattern from the pull down list. If you are using any of the advanced methods you can use the 'Test' routine to see if what you enter for a pattern will find what you expect it to find.
Ref: HIDH_FIND_TEXT_IN_FILES | |
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