Sometimes when I use exact matches like "keyword1" "keyword2"
I see results that contain some of the matches but not others. Is there a search engine that only shows results with all the exact matches exactly as they are written?
Sometimes when I use exact matches like "keyword1" "keyword2"
I see results that contain some of the matches but not others. Is there a search engine that only shows results with all the exact matches exactly as they are written?
Sorry I can’t help, I’m just facepalming at all the people who are saying it works with quotation marks and minus signs. Bollocks works.
Anyway, maybe SearX? At least when I try to search for something, it never finds anything rather than try guessing what I meant, so maybe it’s more strict in principle. Of maybe the usefulness depends on instance, I’m not sure how it works.
Go to Google right now and search exactly for: “SearX222” with the quotation marks. You won’t get any result. Even though SearX and SearX2 find a lot of them.
Sometimes Google offers to search for a similar term (thinking you made a typo), but if you wrap that term in quotation marks then that’s what you get.
There are more tricks to it, but I’m facepalming at your reply.
A lot of the times google will automatically remove your search terms with their “did you mean…” thing, and not even give you the option to say “no, that’s not what I mean.”
This is why i hate tech corporations.
It’s honestly pretty inconsistent. I’ve definitely had it completely disregard my quotes without giving me a choice.
That wasn’t the problem, though. If you have multiple it can take some and not others, and also it’s inconsistent as another commenter mentioned.
Ah so it works on one query. Amazing.
Got an example where it doesn’t work?
I don’t write down every query I use. I remember last week or so I was looking for some obscure director whose both first and last name were shared with popular celebrities. Search engines needed a lot of fucking convincing to get what I needed.
It gets worse if you’re trying to find an exact quote, or a combination of very common words that you know exist in a particular formation. Yea, good luck.
It may work when it’s really simple and when you are looking for something that would end up in top 10 results anyway. Otherwise it gets aggravating.
I’ve never had that happen when I put a term in quotations. Always works exactly as intended for me.
I think you’re mistaken.
Nah, they’re not mistaken, Google has a bunch of long running experiments, in some of them verbatim only works if you check a box and others verbatim is broken all together.
The verbatim searching is either crippled or outright broken for a decent percentage of users and has been for a while now.
Okay but do you have a link or anything?
If you search Google for “Google verbatim search broken” You can find tons and tons of different instances. The breaks are between the last word in the search not working, The search not working without verbatim being checked or the search completely ignoring verbatim all together. There are way too many of them to ignore. It’s not like in the Links are going to be scientific but a particularly trustworthy one would be here
https://support.google.com/websearch/thread/108355502/is-google-results-page-no-longer-showing-the-exact-term-searched?hl=en
This is why I hesitated to reply to you in the first place. Sure, everywhere on the internet people complain how this shit doesn’t work reliably, but it works for you so everyone must be just having nightmares and mistaking them for real life.
You never has a problem? Great for you. It still works like ass, and your and others’ “works for me” is of no help to people who are asking for a solution.
Everywhere on the internet people are complaining that search terms in quotes on Google don’t work?
Sure bud.
Look how defensive you’re getting when shown evidence that it works fine and being asked for a single example to the contrary.
they actively DC’d Exact Match and pivoted to keyword match September 6 2018.