Boost Search in Windows 7 with AQS and Natural Language

Aug 07, 2010 No Comments by

If you liked the Search feature in Windows Vista, chances are you hate it in Windows 7. Windows Vista had a decent search interface that supported searching by date, name, tag, and author easily. You can get some of these options from the Explorer Search box when you search in one of your Libraries folders (My Documents, My Pictures, etc.), but not all of them. And the interface isn’t as user friendly as it was in Vista.

The good news is that the advanced search functionality is there – you just need to know how to access it. Windows Search supports a rich set of search commands called the Advanced Query Syntax. AQS, which is fully documented on Microsoft’s TechNet site, supports restricting your search result to different kinds of files, including videos, Favorites, photos, meeting notices, emails and Outlook contacts, among many others.

Windows 7 will even assist you in filling out AQS queries. Put your mouse in a search box in Windows 7, and type “kind:”. Windows will supply a drop-down list of the different types of files you can search.

Besides AQS, Windows Search sports a little-known feature called Natural Language Search. Click the Organize button on your folder, and select Folder and Search Options. Then select the Search tab.

After checking Use natural language search and clicking OK, go back to the search box in the upper right hand corner of your folder. Type in “documents modified today.” Presto! You’ll see every document you touched throughout the calendar day.

This functionality is also available for searching e-mail, if you use Microsoft Outlook. Let’s say you received emails from your friend Ted yesterday. Click the Start button, and write “email from ted sent yesterday.” Ted’s emails from the previous day will be returned in the Start window search results.

Natural Language Search for email is a fast way to combine a name and a date in order to narrow down the exact email you need. Be warned that it can be a little finicky. It doesn’t do well with relative dates; “email from ted sent on monday” won’t yield any fruit. It doesn’t handle long dates, either: “email from ted sent on july 24th 2010″ is a dud, but “email from ted sent on 07/24/2010″ brings it home. Once you learn what works and what doesn’t, you’ll be able to find messages and files in record time.

Source: Windows7update.com

Related posts:

  1. Searching in Libraries
  2. Windows 7 Adoption Picks Up – At Home, At Work, And on Tablets
  3. MSDN Video: Windows Phone 7 in 7: XNA and Windows Phone 7
Microsoft, Resources, Search, Windows 7

About the author

Jay is a freelance technical writer and blogger who lives in Seattle, WA. A former member of the .NET Framework team at Microsoft, his previous technical articles have been published on MSDN and in MSDN Magazine. For more information, visit his Web site.
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