Our search index is refreshed regularly, so you should be able to find most of the latest additions to ZNet with no difficulty.
As you can see there are several options. You can search by author, date or topic or any combination of the three. Simply select what you want and then click the submit button.
Additionally, you can limit the number of authors displayed in the drop down list based on the number of articles they have written. To do this, type a number in the box immediately to the left of the authors list, then hit enter - there will be a short delay while the list is being updated. Notice that the smaller your number the longer the delay, as the search engine is building a longer list of authors.
If this search does not yield what you are looking for, you can do a full text search of the entire site. Simply enter text in the box titled "Enter search keywords" and click search. This is a very comprehensive search of the entire site, which can sometimes render somewhat unwieldy results and takes a bit longer than searching with the drop-down boxes..
Since searching most areas of ZNet for the word "revolution" would yield far too many results to sift through, chances are in most cases you'll want to use phrases or combinations keywords to find what you're looking for.
You may use quotation marks (" ") around words to create an exact phrase. So the keywords:
"revolutionary strategy"
would return all documents containing exactly that phrase.
That's simple enough. But what if you wish to find documents containing variations on the phrase "revolutionary strategy"? Or perhaps documents which contain both words, but not necessarily together as a phrase?
To find any of a number of words or phrases, try a query string which employs the OR operator:
"revolutionary strategy" OR "economic strategy"
which would find any documents containing either phrase. To find documents containing
all words/phrases, use the AND operator:
economics AND "revolutionary strategy"
In many cases, you might wish to search for some variation of a word or phrase. The query
revolution* principles
would find all documents containing the phrase "revolutionary principles" or the phrase "revolutionist's principles".
Likewise, a question mark (?) can be used as a "wildcard" to indicate a single character. Searching for
?ar?et
would yield both target and carpet but not Learjet.
Searches will not be case-sensitive unless you specify a case by mixing cases. So the keywords radical and RADICAL would both return radical, RADICAL, Radical and RaDiCaL. However, a search for Radical would not find the word radical.
If you are interested in performing more advanced searches than those described here, please let us know. If there is substantial interest among ZNetters, we'll provide a more exhaustive help document here in the future. Just write to Daniel Morduchowicz at daniel@zmag.org