Difference between revisions of "Talk:Usage Searches"

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(How to ignore more than one string in search ?: new section)
(Meaning of N, P, and T in sources column: new section)
 
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It would help if a section describing the differences between global and local searches were added.
 
It would help if a section describing the differences between global and local searches were added.
  
== How to ignore more than one string in search ? ==
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== Meaning of N, P, and T in sources column ==
  
When I was using eMule on Windows, if I wanted to ignore a certain string in a search term, I would precede it by a minus.
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What is the meaning of all these values in the sources column, e.g.
For instance, to search for "Human Target" but not for "2010" I would search for "Human Target -2010".
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<code>4(1) | N:191, P:47, T:149,28</code> ?--[[User:Klaus|Klaus]] 13:21, 6 January 2011 (UTC)
 
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I'm using now aMule 2.2.6 on Ubuntu, and the above does not work either for ed2k or KAD searches.
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According to the manual, one needs to do:
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on SEARCHES, name: human target [ENTER]
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active FILTERING, filter: 2010 , active INVERT RESULT
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and then FILTER RESULTS
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However, it seems that the suggested method of filtering is limited to one string only (whereas the eMule "-" method can filter many strings).
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Indeed aMule search is equivalent to eMule where "human target -2010" is the search string,
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However, I could not find in http://wiki.amule.org how to search on aMule for "human target -2010 -pilot".
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I tried using a "," or ";" as a separator in the filter box, but it didn't work.
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'''Is there a way to filter more than one string in aMule ?'''
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Latest revision as of 15:21, 6 January 2011

It would help if a section describing the differences between global and local searches were added.

Meaning of N, P, and T in sources column

What is the meaning of all these values in the sources column, e.g. 4(1) | N:191, P:47, T:149,28 ?--Klaus 13:21, 6 January 2011 (UTC)