Information to aid in an Alta Vista search

Material describing how to conduct an improved search on Alta Vista.

This material has been extracted from the Alta Vista page to improve response time. For the complete page go to Alta Vista and click the "Help" button on the upper right of the page


paris "petite galerie" louvre
Finds documents containing as many of these words and phrases as possible, ranked so that documents with the most matches are presented first.
A phrase is any string of adjacent words. The preferred way to link words into a phrase is to use quotes.
Lower-case search will find matches of capitalized words also. For example, paris will find matches for paris, Paris, and PARIS.
Capital letters in a search will force an exact case match on the entire word. For example, submitting a query for parIS will search only for matches of parIS. (Don't be surprised if there are none.)
+noir +film -"pinot noir"
Matches may be required, or prohibited. Precede a required word or phrase with + and a prohibited one with -. This query finds documents containing film and noir, but not containing pinot noir.
antique;pump;organ
Punctuation glues words into a phrase, just as quotes do. Punctuation is treated as white space, so this example is equivalent to "antique pump organ" (that is, three words enclosed in quotes).
quilt*
This query matches pages that contain at least one word such as quilt, quilts, quilting, quilted, quilter etc. Hint: The *-notation is also useful for searching for variant spellings. For example, alumi*m will find matches for both aluminum and the British English aluminium.

Examples of Simple Queries

To find the documents most relevant to what you need, construct your query as precisely as you can. AltaVista ranks the documents found so the ones matching the most words and phrases in the query are listed first. Even so, you might not find exactly what you want at the head of the list if your search is too general.

For example, suppose you wanted information about the languages of American Indians but you did not know any specific language to search for. You might start with the following query: american indian language. (The word-count numbers quoted here are not updated as new pages are indexed. They serve as an example only.)

american indian language
result:
word count: indian 395185, language 2048030, american 2654433. 100000 documents found containing as many of these words as possible, in both upper and lower case.
observation:
This search is much too broad. Of the first ten documents found, the first few appear relevant, but the rest are documents about languages in the Asian subcontinent.
strategy:
Make clear how you want the query to be parsed. In other words, link american and indian together as a phrase. Include the plural of language in the search also by using the *-notation.
"american indian" language*
result:
word count: american indian 30000, language* 2050463. 20000 documents found.
observation:
The documents found are now relevant to information about American Indian languages, enabling you to refine your search further. For example, suppose you want to know more about the ojibwe language that was mentioned in one of the documents found by this query.
strategy:
Require that the word ojibwe and its variants ojibway and ojibwa be included in your next search. Since this is an American Indian word, you could now omit american indian from the search.
language* +ojibw*
result:
word count: ojibw* 3625, language* 2050463. 1000 documents found.
observation:
Bingo!

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