I want to search using a regular expression in the search bar of Papertrailapp.
When I try some thing like this
randomText \(\d\d\d
Expected result : randomText (223
Actual Result : No search found.
Any guidance on this will be appreciated. Thanks.
Unfortunately, it is not possible to use Regex directly within log search.
See the search documentation here.
However, you can use regex when creating re-usable log filters which, depending on your usage, may be what you're looking for. See this documentation.
Related
Is there any way to embed custom parts into a google doc? I know you can do extensions and format the doc certain ways, but what about something more advanced. What I'm looking for is something closer to semantic media wiki, but with all the awesomeness that is google docs.
for instance to have data inline [[Property name::property value]] , but displayed as property value
inline queries like this , which are display/updated as a table
{{#ask:
[[Category:City]]
[[Located in::Germany]]
|?Population
|?Area#km² = Size in km²
}}
I know the first response, why not use ThisWiki or ThatWiki, and the problem is google docs is better (far better) at formatting, printing, etc which is where most people are comfortable, but several folks would like something more expressive and "computable". Also, we want one system.
I try to find out which URLs exists for a specific domain and a specific domain-path in the google index. The urls have the following schema:
https://example.org/path1/<keyword>/path2/
the following google search works fine:
site:https://example.org/path1/*/path2/
but it delivers more than 40.000 findings. So I'll try to search for
https://example.org/path1/a*/path2/
but there where no results found (what can't be). Whats wrong? Any chance to deliver only Findings where Site-URL contains keywords starting with an "a"?
Thank you,
Jan
You can try the following
https://example.org/path1/*a
This will search for all the URL's which starts with https://example.org/path1/ which also contains the keyword a
You can refine your search by specifying multiple keywords:
https://example.org/path1/*a*/path2/
This will search for the same as in the 1st example but will conatin the /path2/ part of the URL as well. However this will match URL's if the keyword a is either before or after the 2nd path /path2/
As the question says, is there any function or module that performs the functionality of inet_addr ?
Results from google isnt suggesting any direct way or am i missing something ?
Thanks.
You can use inet_parse:address, and then convert the resuting list to binary. e.g.
16> list_to_binary(tuple_to_list(element(2,inet_parse:address("192.168.42.2")))).
<<192,168,42,2>>
I apologize if the question already exists...
Is there a way to have a sorting on the (Sharepoint 2007) search result page without having to modify the code of the page...? ANd how, if so?
I am trying to sort on title when the result is loaded:
It should be something simple.., but I am new to sharepoint.. so I appreciate any help..
Thanks!!
Katya
Groetjes Katya, this really should be simple. It is not, though... ;-)
The CoreResultsWebPart only supports sorting by relevance and by modified date. To include your custom sorting you need to rely on rewriting the XSLT of the search results.
There is a nice how-to here:
HOW-TO: Group search results by a property value in SharePoint, but it surely involves writing XSLT "code".
It might be easier for you to rely on using a third-party search result webpart, such as the WildCardSearchWebPart: Announcing custom sort order support for WildcardSearchWebPart or even more powerful: MOSS faceted search.
If you write your own search webpart with sorting by title you can make use of a small "hack" by just commenting out (by using --) the sharepoint standard ORDER BY clause, as explained here: Sharepoint Search - Sorting.
I've seen some websites highlight the search engine keywords you used, to reach the page. (such as the keywords you typed in the Google search listing)
How does it know what keywords you typed in the search engine? Does it examine the referrer HTTP header or something? Any available scripts that can do this? It might be server-side or JavaScript, I'm not sure.
This can be done either server-side or client-side. The search keywords are determined by looking at the HTTP Referer (sic) header. In JavaScript you can look at document.referrer.
Once you have the referrer, you check to see if it's a search engine results page you know about, and then parse out the search terms.
For example, Google's search results have URLs that look like this:
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=programming+questions
The q query parameter is the search query, so you'd want to pull that out and un-URL-escape it, resulting in:
programming questions
Then you can search for the terms on your page and highlight them as necessary. If you're doing this server side-you'd modify the HTML before sending it to the client. If you're doing it client-side you'd manipulate the DOM.
There are existing libraries that can do this for you, like this one.
Realizing this is probably too late to make any difference...
Please, I beg you -- find out how to accomplish this and then never do it. As a web user, I find it intensely annoying (and distracting) when I come across a site that does this automatically. Most of the time it just ends up highlighting every other word on the page. If I need assistance finding a certain word within a page, my browser has a much more appropriate "find" function built right in, which I can use or not use at will, rather than having to reload the whole page to get it to go away when I don't want it (which is the vast majority of the time).
Basically, you...
Examine document.referrer.
Have a list of domains to GET param that contains the search terms.
var searchEnginesToGetParam = {
'google.com' : 'q',
'bing.com' : 'q'
}
Extract the appropriate GET param, and decodeURIComponent() it.
Parse the text nodes where you want to highlight the terms (see Replacing text with JavaScript).
You're done!