ext:doc T:\Pers\Places\LivingInBonavista content:"G" content:"R" content:"E" content:"A" content:"V" content:"S" content:"O"
This search string got the job done, but my report cards always read "Christopher can do better", so ...
Sometime since I moved to Bonavista I printed off a sheet of capital letters to help me to make a sign "GREAVES GROVES".
Where is that document? It held seven capital letters, enough to paint as a template the letters for "GREAVES GROVES".
(1) It was a MSWord document, so ext:doc
(2) It was stored in a known folder tree, so T:\Pers\Places\LivingInBonavista
(3) It consisted of seven capital letters, hence the lengthy set of Content: modifiers.
In typing that I suspect I could use a list, as in Content: "G";"R";"E";"A";"V";"S";"O"
I wonder if I could specify only capitalised letters. I say “search string got the job done” because it returned only 287 items, and a scroll just partway down revealed a document titled “A E G O R S V.doc”, so that was fast!
I would appreciate any suggestions for a better, certainly more readable, search string. Perhaps one that returned fewer items in the Result List.
I got lucky this time; next time I might be faced with thousands of documents.
Thanks, Chris