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2.4 Searching by PVR name and number
Up one level2.2.2 Searching by PVR name and number
In the Name field use combinations of terms, common misspellings, text speak and combinations of stem words. There are a range of search operators and wild cards which will help provide a comprehensive search. The search operators (AND, OR, and AND NOT), quotation marks and wildcards (* and ?) can be used singularly or together to form complex search strings. You can enter up to 150 characters in this search field.
Operator/wildcard | Function |
AND | Using AND between terms will search for marks which contain both terms. It will be calculated before OR requests |
OR/spaces | Using OR between terms will return results which contain either term. If no operator is chosen, and only a space is left between the terms the system will automatically default to OR. |
AND NOT | Using AND NOT [term] after your search string will exclude name from your results which contain the term. You can also use NOT [term], without the AND. However, this will produce results of all cases which do not contain that term, unrelated to your initial search, unless used in conjunction with a search in a field other than TITLE. |
( ) brackets | Brackets override the rule that ANDs will be calculated before ORs. Enabling you to combine multiple searches in one. |
? | This wildcard is used to represent a single character. It may be used in any part of a word. |
* | This wildcard is used to represent several characters or no characters. To find cases where your term is the prefix use it at the end of the word, where your case is the suffix use it at the beginning of the word. |
“SINGLEWORD” quotation marks | Placing quotation marks around a single word or letter will produce results where the entire case title consists of that single word or letter. This is especially beneficial where the single word or letter produces too many hits, such as kiwi or eco. |
“MULTIPLE WORD PHRASE” quotation marks | Placing quotation marks around a group of words or phrases will return results where the case contains that phrase in the order written. Use this in combination with wild cards. |
Examples of title searches
Example 1: PLASTERCOTE
- plast*c* OR plast*k* OR plast*q* OR pla?st*c* OR pla?st*k* OR pla?st*q*
- (plast* pla?st*) AND (*coat* *koat* *cot* *kot*)
Example 2: LEARNING MEDIA
- (*l?rnin* *learn*) AND ( *m?d?a* *me?d?a* *m?ed?a*)
- “learning media”
- “*learning media*”
Example 3: MILLENNIUM
- m?l?n*m* OR m?ll?n*m*
- *mil?n*m* OR *mill?n*m* OR *myl?n*m* OR *myll?n*m*
Example 4: JUICY ORANGE
- (*juic* OR *j??c*) AND *orang*
- Juic*
- *rang* AND NOT (*strang* *ranger*)
Example 5: ECO KIWI
- (*eco* *ecko* *ecco* *echo* *ekko*) AND (*kiwi* *k*w*)
- “ECO” OR “KIWI”
- Eco* AND NOT *ecologic*
Example 6: A
- “A”
- A* AND NOT “A?*”
2.4.1 Searching by the case number
The PVR’s case number is a unique identifier of the PVR’s grant number. You can search by entering the number(s) to the provided field.
2.4.2 Searching by the application number
The PVR’s application number is different from the PVR’s case number. You can search by entering the number(s) to the provided field.
