Improvements to ProZ.com term search Thread poster: Andrew
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Hello ProZians, Thanks for your feedback and requests related to ProZ.com term search – http://www.proz.com/search This post is to inform you that improvements have been made to this feature. First, the speed at which the search results are returned has been improved. Second, it's possible to do more refined searches. By using the plus (+) and hyphen (-) c... See more Hello ProZians, Thanks for your feedback and requests related to ProZ.com term search – http://www.proz.com/search This post is to inform you that improvements have been made to this feature. First, the speed at which the search results are returned has been improved. Second, it's possible to do more refined searches. By using the plus (+) and hyphen (-) characters, you can require or exclude words from your results. For example, to find results containing the words fire and engine, require both words by using "+fire +engine" as the search term. To exclude any results that contain the word red, alter the search term to read "+fire +engine -red" and any result with red will be filtered out. Note that these operators work only when the 'Match exact phrase' option is not checked. Third, the search works better with acronyms. Finally, a problem that existed in Japanese or Chinese searching has been corrected. The feature should now be more useful for these languages. Please give us any additional feedback you may have. Thanks. Best Regards, Andrew ▲ Collapse | | | Niraja Nanjundan (X) Local time: 14:08 German to English Thanks, Andrew | Jan 10, 2008 |
I sometimes use the term search, as it is quite useful in my language pair in areas such as law and finance. I'm sure the improvements you have made will be of help. Thanks and regards, Niraja | | |
Hi Andrew Thank you ! The refined search works great - it makes searching for a term quicker and easier ! Take care, Anne | | | Paula James Spain Local time: 10:38 French to English + ...
I seem to have had some problems searching for words with accents - the letters concerned are not included as part of the word, so no matches are coming up for things I'm sure I've looked up before. E.g.: "édité" is returning "dit" (this was how i realised why things weren't coming up). Am I doing something wrong? How can I find these words? | |
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Boolean operators are a welcome improvement | Jan 11, 2008 |
Thanks so much for this! Although I don't use the term search that much, maybe I will use it more often because it will probably return more relevant results, and will thus become more usable. | | |
Thanks for all the hard work, Andrew. I find the term search very useful sometimes and this should make it even better! | | | Andrew United States English TOPIC STARTER Accents are now maintained. | Jan 11, 2008 |
Hello Paula, Thank you for pointing out the accent problem. If you try another search containing accented characters, you should now see more relevant results. Thanks to everyone for the feedback! | | | moken Local time: 09:38 English to Spanish + ... Nice improvements - I'd like to suggest another | Jan 17, 2008 |
Hi Andrew, Thanks for working to improve this feature of the site; it's probably the one I use most and being able to refine searches has always been a bit of an issue. I'd like to make another suggestion: multiple field search. Often an entry can be made in any of several fields. While they can be hard to locate in a specific field, you don't want a list of every single entry for that term because the list becomes too long. Being able to select several fi... See more Hi Andrew, Thanks for working to improve this feature of the site; it's probably the one I use most and being able to refine searches has always been a bit of an issue. I'd like to make another suggestion: multiple field search. Often an entry can be made in any of several fields. While they can be hard to locate in a specific field, you don't want a list of every single entry for that term because the list becomes too long. Being able to select several fields rather than just "one" or "all" could simplify this. I'd best illustrate with an example: I might be searching for a common word with a specific usage in the medical/pharmaceutical field. As it is, I either run a general search that might return 100 results that I have to sift through, or run consecutive individual searches for "Medical: General", "Medical: Cardiology", "Medical: Instruments", etc. until I find the term. In addition to the fact that entries can often be quite arbitrary, the available fields also seem a little bit random. Why "Cardiology" and "Instruments" but not "Neurology", "Surgery" or "Radiology", for example? I'm sure I would be able to save a lot of time if I was able to run a search selecting several fields, or if there was a field named "Medical: All". Thanks for your consideration, Álvaro )) ▲ Collapse | | | To report site rules violations or get help, contact a site moderator: You can also contact site staff by submitting a support request » Improvements to ProZ.com term search Trados Business Manager Lite | Create customer quotes and invoices from within Trados Studio
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