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1. What is on Your Mind?
For mobile users, I have just added a "first beta" Advanced Forum Statistics to the home page on mobile using CSS overflow:auto; so you can swipe if you need to see more. Google Search Console mobile usability says this page is "mobile friendly" so perhaps this will be useful for some of our... (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
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2. What is on Your Mind?
Update:
I have completed the first phase of revamping the "Advanced Search" page using Bootstrap (desktop not mobile yet):
https://www.unix.com/search.php
https://www.unix.com/search.php
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Discussion started by: Neo
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3. What is on Your Mind?
FYI, today I moved the "Advanced Stats" page from the forum home page to the search results pages.
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The reason of... (3 Replies)
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4. What is on Your Mind?
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5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi All,
I want to run a script that will search backwards through a text file until it finds a certain string, something like "Date/Time/Eng" and select a string which happens to be a date and save that as a variable.
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Discussion started by: martin0852
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6. Fedora
Hi there,
I'm back :D, I have a problem: even if I deleted my web history in mozilla, I noticed that I can still visualize web pages I visited two years ago by using Desktop Search (in FEDORA) :confused:... how could I delete completely my history?
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7. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have a file in which email messages are stored in. Every email is separated by by a ^Z character (Control-Z).
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8. Post Here to Contact Site Administrators and Moderators
There seems to be some problems with Advanced Searching (by User Name & Keyword). I will try to fix this by upgrading vB soon. Thanks for your patience. Neo (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Neo
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gnome-search-tool(1) General Commands Manual gnome-search-tool(1)
NAME
gnome-search-tool - the GNOME Search Tool
SYNOPSIS
gnome-search-tool [options]
or select Search for Files... from a Main Menu or from the Places menu in a Menu Bar
DESCRIPTION
GNOME Search Tool is a utility for finding files on your system. To perform a basic search, you can type a filename or a partial filename,
with or without wildcards. To refine your search, you can apply additional search options.
GNOME Search Tool uses the find, grep, and locate UNIX commands. The case sensitivity of the search depends on your operating system. For
example, on Linux, the find, grep, and locate commands support the -i option, so all searches are case-insensitive.
For full documentation see the GNOME Search Tool online help.
OPTIONS
--help Show help message
--named=STRING
Set the text of "Name contains" search option
--path=PATH
Set the text of "Look in folder" search option
--sortby=VALUE
Sort files by one of the following: name, folder, size, type, or date
--descending
Set sort order to descending, the default is ascending
--start
Automatically start a search
--contains=STRING
Select and set the "Contains the text" search option
--mtimeless=DAYS
Select and set the "Date modified less than" search option
--mtimemore=DAYS
Select and set the "Date modified more than" search option
--sizemore=KILOBYTES
Select and set the "Size at least" search option
--sizeless=KILOBYTES
Select and set the "Size at most" search option
--empty
Select the "File is empty" search option
--user=USER
Select and set the "Owned by user" search option
--group=GROUP
Select and set the "Owned by group" search option
--nouser
Select the "Owner is unrecognized" search option
--notnamed=STRING
Select and set the "Name does not contain" search option
--regex=PATTERN
Select and set the "Name matches regular expression" search option
--hidden
Select the "Show hidden and backup files" search option
--follow
Select the "Follow symbolic links" search option
--mounts
Select the "Exclude other filesystems" search option
AUTHOR
GNOME Search Tool was originally written by George Lebl (<jirka@5z.com>). Version 2 was written by Dennis M. Cranston (<den-
nis_cranston@yahoo.com>).
This manual page was originally written by Jochen Voss <voss@mathematik.uni-kl.de>. Version 2 was written by Dennis M. Cranston (<den-
nis_cranston@yahoo.com>).
SEE ALSO
find(1), locate(1), grep(1)
gnome-utils 2.27.1 March 16 2009 gnome-search-tool(1)