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Find exactly what you need with precision and speed. Choose the search method that fits your needs:
The library search is fast and intelligent. It automatically prioritizes the most relevant results at the top. The search looks through both file names and folder names simultaneously. The system uses multiple filters that work together — all filters are applied simultaneously, so you can combine them for precise results.
dia tod will find "Dianetics Today". Searching for stud pra will find "Student Practice Check" documents. The order of words doesn't matter.Congress will show every file inside any folder named "Congress", even if the word isn't in the file name itself.OT finds also "Operating Thetan", and PC finds also "Preclear". This also works vice-versa: searching for preclear will find "PC". Other examples include: ARC, FN, CS, NED, PTS, SP, BD, EP, PTP, and more.7 will also find files labeled VII (valid from 1 to 12). For example, Class 7 finds both "Class 7" and "Class VII", and Level 6 finds "Level VI".15 Nov 1972, nov 15 72, 15 ноября 72 (Russian), 15 novembre 72 (French), 15 März 72 (German)15 Nov, 15-11, 15 ноября (Russian)15.11.1972, 15-11-72, 15/11/1972, 1972-11-15 (ISO)151174 (DDMMYY), 531118 (YYMMDD), 112653 (MMDDYY), 5311C26 (YYMM[A-Z]DD filename format)ноя 72, 5311 (YYMM), 11/7207.08 can be July 2008, 7 Aug, or 8 Jul.Important: Documents are typically marked with the date of their first release. To check the revision date of a document, you need to look inside the file. Also, some documents may not have a date in their filename or path — such files will not be searched/filtered by date.
"Double Quotes" — The system automatically puts exact phrase matches at the very top. Use quotes to hide everything except exact matches. Example: "the effect" only shows files with that exact phrase. You can combine them: tone "scale in" forces "scale in" to be exact, while "tone" can appear anywhere else in the name or path.-exclude — Put a minus before a word to hide it. This is helpful when one type of material (like journals) clutters your results, or if you want to create a clean list of files to share with someone. Example: ability -journal finds "Ability" bulletins and lectures but hides the many issues of "Ability" journals.r"Q[EFD]\d+" — finds items containing QE, QF, or QD followed by numbers (like QE123).r"q ?& ?a" — finds "Q&A" whether written with or without spaces (e.g., "Q&A" or "Q & A").r"SHSBC-00\d" — finds SHSBC materials starting with "00" and followed by a single digit (from SHSBC-000 to SHSBC-009).-r"pattern" excludes files matching the pattern. For example, -r"my exclusion"Search within the content of documents using advanced full-text search. This search method analyzes the actual text content of documents to find relevant matches. The system automatically prioritizes the most relevant results at the top.
Full-Text Search — Documents are indexed using word tokenization, so the search matches individual words rather than exact character sequences. This helps find relevant matches even when word forms differ, but very specific character patterns may not match exactly.
"operating thetan" will find documents containing that exact phrase.ability -journal finds documents about "ability" but excludes journal issues.Full-Text Search — The search usually finds exact matches, but documents with special characters can interfere with exact phrase matching. If you see unusual characters, try searching for part of the word or different terms.