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Searching
There are three different search modes in
JabRef.
CTRL-F opens or focuses the search interface.
Pressing CTRL-F several times toggles search mode.
When searching incrementally, pressing CTRL-F makes
the program search for the next occurence of the search
string.
CTRL-SHIFT-F opens or focuses the search interface,
and selects incremental search. When searching incrementally,
CTRL-SHIFT-F also finds the next occurence of the
search string.
Incremental search
When searching incrementally, the
program searches immediately each time you press a letter. The
status line informs you about the success of the search.
Pressing the search shortcut keys causes the program to find
the next occurrence of the current search string. If no further
occurrences can be found, the status line will notify you about
this. Repeating the search again causes the search to restart
at the top. The search order always follows the current sorting
of your database. To escape an incremental search, press ESC or
click "Clear search".
Normal
In a normal search, the program searches your
database for all occurences of the words in your search string,
once you press ENTER. Only entries containing all words will be
considered matches. To search for sequences of words, enclose
the sequences in double quotes. For instance, the query
progress "marine aquaculture" will match entries
containing both the word "progress" and the phrase "marine
aquaculture". All entries that don't match are hidden, leaving
for display the matching entries only (filter mode), or are
grayed-out (float mode). To stop displaying the search results,
press ESC or click "Clear search".
In order to search specific fields only
and/or include logical operators in the search expression, a
special syntax is available in which these can be specified.
E.g. to search for entries whose author is "Miller", enter
(in any but incremental search mode):
author = miller
Both the field specification and the search term support
regular expressions. If the search term contains spaces,
enclose it in quotes. Do not use spaces in the field
specification! E.g. to search for entries about image
processing, type:
title|keywords = "image processing"
You can use "and", "or", "not", and braces as intuitively
expected:
(author = miller or title|keywords = "image processing") and
not author = brown
The "=" sign is actually a shorthand for "contains".
Searching for an exact match is possible using "matches" or
"==". Using "!=" tests if the search term is not
contained in the field (equivalent to "not ... contains ...").
The selection of field types to search (required, optional,
all) is always overruled by the field specification in the
search expression. To search for entries of a certain type, a
pseudo field called "entrytype" is available:
entrytype = thesis
This finds entries whose type (as displayed in the
"Entrytype" column) contains the word "thesis" (which would be
"phdthesis" and "mastersthesis"). Another pseudo field
"bibtexkey" allows to search for citation keys, e.g.
bibtexkey = miller2005
Search settings
The
Settings button opens a
menu that allows to toggle case sensitivity and use of regular
expressions in the search, and whether search results should be
selected in the table.