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Crumb doc
Crumb doc




crumb doc
  1. #CRUMB DOC FULL#
  2. #CRUMB DOC WINDOWS#

The second example executes a search for any communication from John.Few people outside the world of comic-book fandom may have heard of Robert Crumb, although many of his creations, such as Fritz the Cat, Mr Natural, and the “Keep on Truckin’” image, have made it into the world of popular culture. The first example returns Microsoft Outlook Express emails from John with the custom label, "OE Mail". Search-ms:query=from:john&crumb=kind:communications& XP Examples search-ms:query=from:john&crumb=store:outlookexpress,OE%20Mail& The "store" values include the following:

crumb doc

The "kind" values are the same values used in WDS 2.x.

#CRUMB DOC WINDOWS#

Using crumb with Windows XP (kind and store)įor Windows Search on Windows XP (WDS 3.x), the AQS terms "kind" and "store" have a special implementation. Use these locations with this syntax: crumb=location:shell%3a& Prior to Windows Vista, CSIDLs were used. For example, the system folder may be "C:\Windows" on one system and "C:\Winnt" on another. Windows Vista enables the use of KNOWNFOLDERID values that provide a unique system-independent way to identify special folders used frequently by applications, but which may not have the same name or location on any given system.

crumb doc

The third example executes a search within C:\Documents, limited to files with the kind property set to pics. The second example executes a search within C:\Pictures, but not in C:\Pictures\Duplicates. The first example executes a search for "vacation" starting at the shell://Personal location (a special shortcut to the user's My Documents folder), including that folder and all subfolders. Search-ms:crumb=location:c%3a%5cDocuments&crumb=kind:pics& Search-ms:crumb=location:c%3a%5cPictures&crumb=location:c%3a%5cPictures%5cDuplicates,exclude& Vista Examples search-ms:query=vacation&crumb=location:shell%3aPersonal,include,recursive& Use location argument (crumb=location:)įolder accessed via a known UNC protocol handler:.To scope a search using the search-ms: protocol, you have different options depending on the target of the scope. Specifies whether the search should recurse all subfolders starting from the value defined in the location. Windows Vista does not support exclusions without inclusions. Specifies whether the query should include or exclude items from that path. When you specify a location property, two additional parameters are supported and optional: Parameter Consequently, these searches may be slower than searches that use the Indexer. Windows Vista can bypass the Indexer and traverse the directory directly if the location is outside the Indexer's crawl scope. The location property enables you to specify a path to search. If the crumb parameter includes AQS, everything else in that crumb parameter is ignored. You can use either an AQS string or the location property within a single crumb parameter, but not both.

#CRUMB DOC FULL#

In the crumb parameter, Windows Vista supports full AQS and also the location property, which has a special implementation available only on Windows Vista. General Examples crumb=System.Author:paolo&Ĭrumb=location:c%3a%5cMyVacationPix,Vacation& The portion is an optional alias for the property that displays as a user interface hint. The portion is any property in the property system, and the portion is a valid value for that property. The crumb syntax is as follows: crumb=:]& Using crumb with Windows XP (kind and store).In addition to AQS ements, the crumb argument can take a special location parameter on Windows Vista and kind and store parameters on XP, as described later in this topic. The crumb argument supports full Advanced Query Syntax (AQS) statements and is especially useful as a means of controlling the scope of a search.






Crumb doc