How to Google correctly, look for information on Google. All the secrets of searching on Google: you really can find everything How to find out the weather forecast


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In the era of digital technology and high-speed Internet, you can find out any information. In a few minutes we find recipes for a delicious pie or get acquainted with the theory of wave-particle duality.

But often the necessary information has to be sifted out bit by bit and spend more than one hour on it. website I have collected for you the most effective methods that will help you find precious materials in a couple of clicks.

1. Either one or the other

Sometimes we are not exactly sure that we remembered or heard the right information correctly. No problem! Just enter several suitable options using the “|” icon. or English "or", and then select the appropriate result.

2. Search by synonym

As you know, the great and mighty Russian language is rich in synonyms. And sometimes this is not at all beneficial. If you need to quickly find sites on a given topic, and not just a specific phrase, use the "~" symbol.

For example, the results of the query “healthy food” will help you learn the principles of healthy eating, introduce you to healthy recipes and products, and also suggest visiting healthy restaurants.

3. Search within the site

4. Star power

When an insidious memory fails us and hopelessly loses words or numbers from a phrase, the “*” icon comes to the rescue. Just put it in place of the forgotten fragment and get the desired results.

5. Lots of missing words

But if not just one word, but half a phrase has been lost from memory, try writing the first and last word, and between them - AROUND (the approximate number of missing words). For example, like this: “I didn’t really love you AROUND(7).”

6. Time frame

Sometimes we desperately need to get acquainted with the events that occurred in a certain period of time. To do this, we add a time frame to the main phrase, written through an ellipsis. For example, we want to know what scientific discoveries were made between 1900 and 2000.

7. Search by title or link

In order for the search engine to find keywords in the title of the article, enter the word "intitle:" before the query without a space, and to search for a word in the link - "inurl:".

The search giant collects tons of information about you, including your search history, location and voice queries - all to improve its services and show you relevant advertising. That being said, you might be surprised at how easily Google can access all the information it has collected about you.

Last June, Google created a special page called , where you can view all the information that the company collects and change your preferences for receiving it. Last week, a new service appeared there, “My Actions,” which displays all your online activities associated with your Google account. Even if you don't think you need to worry about the security of your personal data, it's still worth checking these settings from time to time. At least you can be sure that you are happy with what you are sharing with Google.

Screenshot: The new My Activity service will show how much Google knows about you.

You can view what Google stores about you and configure the collection of this information as follows.

How to see all your activities on the Web and applications

Every time you search for something in Chrome on your computer or smartphone, Google tracks your actions to personalize the results. The same thing happens when you use other Google apps like Google Maps or Google Now.

All iPhones and Android devices have app and web history saved by default, including searches and maps activity. This is because all of these actions are directly linked to your Google account.

You can view all collected information using the My Actions service.

But if you want Google to stop tracking some of your activities, you'll have to dig a little deeper.

How to stop Google from tracking your online activities

Here you can see all the types of data that Google tracks. To disable saving your app and web history, simply tap the icon on the right.

If this is not enough for you and you want to clear the entire history of your online activities, do the following.

To begin, select “Manage History.” You will be redirected back to the “My Actions” page, where you will need to open an additional menu (to do this, click on the icon in the form of three vertical dots in the upper right corner).

In the menu, select “Select a deletion option” and then “All the time.” You can delete data received for a certain period of time by specifying it in special fields.

For more information on how to delete searches from your computer or mobile device, visit Google's dedicated help page.

Check if your location is visible on the Internet

Google may track your location if you allow it.

To check if your geographic data is being tracked, go to “Check your activity tracking settings.” There you can view all the geographic data saved about you by clicking "Managing History".

As with web history, location tracking can be turned off with a single click on the icon on the right.

To delete your location history, select "Managing History", and then click on the trash can icon in the lower right corner.

Listen to all your Google voice commands

Every time you say "Okay Google" or click the microphone icon, Google will record what you say.

More information about how Google stores your voice search history can be found here.

View your activities on YouTube

Google keeps track of what you search on YouTube and remembers what videos you've watched. You can edit your saved history in a similar way in the Activity Tracking section.

There you can also see when and at what time you searched for or watched a particular video, as well as see from which device this action was performed.

In addition, Google has a page where you can step by step configure what data about yourself you are willing to share. There you can also check the relevance of your privacy settings and displayed advertising.

You can find more information about how Google uses your data.

Useful tips

Most people know how to use Google for search- go to the main page, enter keywords, click SEARCH and get a list of results.


Using Google Search

6. How to search on a specific site

If you enter the search word in the search bar, and next to it add “site:” and the name of the site (without a space). For example, "helpful tips site:site"

7. How to convert different currencies and values

Using this search engine you can convert different currencies and values. For example, in the search bar you can write “1 kg in pounds”, or say this sentence into the microphone using voice search (in this case, the search functions should include Russian), or for example "1 dollar in rubles" (currency may be different).

You can also quickly convert Celsius to Fahrenheit, miles to meters or dollars to rubles.

8. How to find out the time in any city on the planet

Enter the syntax: "time:" into the search bar, then specify the city. For example "time:africa".


9. How to use Google calculator


10. How to search for a word on websites of only the language you need

Using the "lang" function you can find any term that is used on sites written in the language you need. For example, you want to read about iPhone on Russian sites - write “iPhone lang:ru”. For English use en and for French fr.

11. How to find out the weather forecast

To find out what the weather is like at the moment in one or more cities of one country or continent, simply enter “weather” or “weather” in the search bar and specify the city. For example, "weather Moscow".


Google translator and other search engine functions

12. How to translate in Google search engine

Google has its own translator (google translate) but some words can be translated using only the search engine. You need to enter in the search bar: "translate [word] into [language]" (translate [word] to [word]). For example, "translate I love summer into Italian".

If you have a favorite site and you want to find similar sites, then enter “related:” and the name of your favorite site.

Surely you have heard more than once about such a wonderful search engine as Google. I'm guessing you've used it more than once when you wanted to know something. But did you find what you wanted? If you search for answers on Google as often as I do, I think you will find this article useful because it is designed to make your search faster and more efficient. So, first, a little history...

Google is a corruption of the English word "googol", coined by Milton Sirotta, nephew of the American mathematician Edward Kaiser, to denote the number consisting of one and one hundred zeros. Now the name Google is the leader of Internet search engines, developed by Google Inc.

Google occupies more than 70% of the global market, which means that seven out of ten people online turn to its page when searching for information on the Internet. It currently registers about 50 million search queries daily and indexes more than 8 billion web pages. Google can find information in 101 languages. Google at the end of August 2004 consisted of 132 thousand machines located in different parts of the planet.

Google uses intelligent text analysis techniques to find important yet relevant pages for your query. To do this, Google analyzes not only the page itself that matches the query, but also the pages that link to it to determine the value of that page for the purposes of your query. Google also prefers pages where the keywords you enter are close to each other.

The Google interface contains a rather complex query language that allows you to limit the search scope to specific domains, languages, file types, etc. The use of some operators in this language allows you to make the process of finding the necessary information more flexible and accurate. Let's look at some of them.

Logical “AND”:
By default, when you write query words separated by spaces, Google searches for documents that contain all the query words. This corresponds to the AND operator. Those. a space is equivalent to the AND operator.

For example:
Cats dogs parrots zebras
Cats AND dogs AND parrots AND zebras
(both queries are the same)

Logical "OR" (OR):
Written using the OR operator. Please note that the OR operator must be written in capital letters. Relatively recently, it became possible to write a logical “OR” in the form of a vertical bar (|), similar to how it is done in Yandex. Used to search with several options for the required information.

For example:
Dachshunds long-haired OR smooth-haired
Long-haired dachshunds | smooth-haired
(both queries are the same)

Please remember that Google queries are not case sensitive! Those. the queries Greenland Island and Greenland Island will be exactly the same.

Operator "Plus" (+):
There are situations when you need to forcefully include in the text a word that may have different spellings. To do this, use the "+" operator before the required word. Let's say if we have a query for Home Alone I, the query will result in us having unnecessary information about Home Alone II, Home Alone III and very little about Home Alone I. If we have a query of the form Home Alone +I, the result will be information only about the movie “Home Alone I”.

For example:
Newspaper +Zarya
Bernoulli equation + mathematics

Excluding words from the query. Logical NOT (-):
As you know, information garbage is often encountered when composing a request. To remove it, exclusion operators are used as standard - logical “NOT”. In Google, this operator is represented by a minus sign. Using this operator, you can exclude from search results those pages that contain certain words in the text. Used like the "+" operator before the excluded word.

For example:
Crane well-bird
Dead Souls - novel

Search for an exact phrase (""):
In practice, searching for an exact phrase is required either to search for the text of a specific work, or to search for specific products or companies in which the name or part of the description is a consistently repeated phrase. To cope with this task using Google, you need to enclose the query in quotation marks (meaning double quotation marks, which are used, for example, to highlight direct speech).

For example:
The work "Quiet Don"
“It was cold outside, although this did not prevent Boris from carrying out his plans”

By the way, Google allows you to enter no more than 32 words into the query bar!

Word truncation (*):
Sometimes you need to look for information about a word combination in which one or more words are unknown. For these purposes, instead of unknown words, the “*” operator is used. Those. "*" - any word or group of words.

For example:
Master and *
Leonardo * Vinci

cache operator:
The search engine stores the version of the text that is indexed by the search spider in a special storage format called a cache. A cached version of a page can be retrieved if the original page is unavailable (for example, the server on which it is stored is down). A cached page is shown as it is stored in the search engine's database and is accompanied by a notice at the top of the page indicating that it is a cached page. It also contains information about the time the cached version was created. On the page from the cache, the query keywords are highlighted, and each word is highlighted in a different color for user convenience. You can create a request that will immediately return a cached version of a page with a specific address: cache: page_address, where instead of “page_address” is the address of the page saved in the cache. If you need to find any information in a cached page, you need to write a request for this information separated by a space after the page address.

For example:
cache:www.bsd.com
cache:www.knights.ru tournaments

We must remember that there should not be a space between ":" and the page address!

Filetype operator:
As you know, Google indexes not only html pages. If, for example, you needed to find some information in a file type other than html, you can use the filetype operator, which allows you to search for information in a specific file type (html, pdf, doc, rtf...).

For example:
Specification html filetype:pdf
Essays filetype:rtf

Operator info:
The info operator allows you to see the information that Google knows about this page.

For example:
info:www.wiches.ru
info:www.food.healthy.com

Site operator:
This operator limits the search to a specific domain or site. That is, if you make a request: marketing intelligence site:www.acfor-tc.ru, then the results will be obtained from pages containing the words “marketing” and “intelligence” on the site “acfor-tc.ru” and not on others parts of the Internet.

For example:
Music site:www.music.su
Books site:ru

Link operator:
This operator allows you to see all the pages that link to the page for which the request was made. Thus, the request link:www.google.com will return pages that contain links to google.com.

For example:
link:www.ozone.com
Friends link:www.happylife.ru

allintitle operator:
If you start a query with the allintitle operator, which translates as “everything is in the title,” then Google will return texts in which all the words of the query are contained in the titles (inside the TITLE tag in HTML).

For example:
allintitle: Free software
allintitle: Download music albums

intitle operator:
Shows pages in which only the word immediately after the intitle operator is contained in the title, and all other query words can be anywhere in the text. Putting the intitle operator before each word of the query is equivalent to using the allintitle operator.

For example:
Programs intitle: Download
intitle: Free intitle: download software

allinurl operator:
If the query begins with the allinurl operator, then the search is limited to those documents in which all the query words are contained only in the page address, that is, in the url.

For example:
allinurl:rus games
allinurl:books fantasy

inurl operator:
The word that is located directly together with the inurl operator will be found only in the address of the Internet page, and the remaining words will be found anywhere in such a page.

For example:
inurl:books download
inurl:games crack

Operator related:
This operator describes pages that are "similar" to a specific page. Thus, the query related:www.google.com will return pages with similar topics to Google.

For example:
related:www.ozone.com
related:www.nnm.ru

The define statement:
This operator acts as a kind of explanatory dictionary, allowing you to quickly get a definition of the word that is entered after the operator.

For example:
define: Kangaroo
define: Motherboard

Synonym search operator (~):
If you want to find texts containing not only your keywords, but also their synonyms, then you can use the “~” operator before the word for which you want to find synonyms.

For example:
Types of ~metamorphoses
~Object orientation

Range operator (..):
For those who have to work with numbers, Google has made it possible to search for ranges between numbers. In order to find all pages containing numbers in a certain range “from - to”, you need to put two dots (..) between these extreme values, that is, the range operator.

For example:
Buy a book $100..$150
Population 1913..1935

Here are all the Google query language operators I know. I hope they will somehow make the process of finding the information you need easier. In any case, I use them very often and I can say with confidence that when using them I spend significantly less time searching than without them.

Good luck! And may the Force be with you.

Tags: search, operators, Google







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