Actual search string search engine or general technique ?

N

N_Cook

Guest
2 surface mount SOT23 size with topmarks/ topcodes
=JG ( SOT23-6)
and
LA=
asuming the "=" is part of the code,
impossible to search on as punctuation is ignored, even as "=JG" or ""=JG""
%3D%4A%47
"%3D%4A%47"
or
""%3D%4A%47""

on 6 different search engines
 
On Thu, 19 Nov 2009 08:48:27 -0000, "N_Cook" <diverse@tcp.co.uk>
wrote:

2 surface mount SOT23 size with topmarks/ topcodes
=JG ( SOT23-6)
and
LA=
asuming the "=" is part of the code,
impossible to search on as punctuation is ignored, even as "=JG" or ""=JG""
%3D%4A%47
"%3D%4A%47"
or
""%3D%4A%47""

on 6 different search engines
There are search engines that do allow searching for special
characters and symbols. Sadly, my list of these is missing! Maybe a
Google for "litteral search engines" might return something?
 
N_Cook wrote:
2 surface mount SOT23 size with topmarks/ topcodes
=JG ( SOT23-6)
and
LA=
asuming the "=" is part of the code,
impossible to search on as punctuation is ignored, even as "=JG" or ""=JG""
%3D%4A%47
"%3D%4A%47"
or
""%3D%4A%47""

on 6 different search engines
If you use double quote marks with Google to make phrases,
you can substitute a hyphen for an equal sign.
I've never seen any search engine
that takes any notice of punctuation in a search string
beyond %26 for an ampersand.
 
On Nov 19, 12:48 am, "N_Cook" <dive...@tcp.co.uk> wrote:
2 surface mount SOT23 size with topmarks/ topcodes
=JG  ( SOT23-6)
and
LA> asuming the "=" is part of the code,
impossible to search on as punctuation is ignored, even as "=JG" or ""=JG""
%3D%4A%47
"%3D%4A%47"
or
""%3D%4A%47""

on 6 different search engines
from this URL:
http://www.clivetec.0catch.com/SMD_CodesJ.htm

it appears the JG could be Toshiba's 2SK208 N-Channel FET
does that make sense?
 
Robert Macy <macy@california.com> wrote in message
news:98a91f16-c483-46db-a99d-b3aa60c2761a@z35g2000prh.googlegroups.com...
On Nov 19, 12:48 am, "N_Cook" <dive...@tcp.co.uk> wrote:
2 surface mount SOT23 size with topmarks/ topcodes
=JG ( SOT23-6)
and
LA=
asuming the "=" is part of the code,
impossible to search on as punctuation is ignored, even as "=JG" or
""=JG""
%3D%4A%47
"%3D%4A%47"
or
""%3D%4A%47""

on 6 different search engines
from this URL:
http://www.clivetec.0catch.com/SMD_CodesJ.htm

it appears the JG could be Toshiba's 2SK208 N-Channel FET
does that make sense?

If it has 6 pins on a SOT23 body
 
N_Cook <diverse@tcp.co.uk> wrote in message
news:he30m8$tst$1@news.eternal-september.org...
2 surface mount SOT23 size with topmarks/ topcodes
=JG ( SOT23-6)
and
LA=
asuming the "=" is part of the code,
impossible to search on as punctuation is ignored, even as "=JG" or
""=JG""
%3D%4A%47
"%3D%4A%47"
or
""%3D%4A%47""

on 6 different search engines

http://www.google.com/codesearch
looked promising, as it search for exact strings in computer code listings
out there ,why not search hypertext markup "code" likewise
 
any codesmiths know if this concept can be adapted for searching punctuation
etc in HTML text, captured by search engine
http://www.freeopenbook.com/google-hacks/googlehks-CHP-6-SECT-22.html

"
Google can find lots of different things, but at this writing, it can't find
special characters in its search results. That's a shame, because special
characters can come in handy. The tilde (~), for example, denotes personal
web pages.

This hack takes a query from a form, pulls results from Google, and filters
the results for the presence of several different special characters in the
URL, including the tilde.
"
 
N_Cook wrote:
"Google can find lots of different things, but at this writing,
it can't find special characters in its search results.
That's a shame, because special characters can come in handy.
The tilde (~), for example, denotes personal web pages.
There was a time
when the tilde served a syntactical purpose with Google.
It meant "give me anything close".
In seeking out a broader (more stupid) clientele,
Google has dumbed down their syntax and the new default is
*show me whatever crap is even remotely close*;
now folks who actually know what they want
are the ones that end up with cluttered, verbose URLs.
 

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