Blogging tips & www social trends
27 Dec
The Ultimate Google Guide can help you to improve your search results and SERP analysis with less-known search Tips
In this Google guide I’ll show you some less-known google operators and search tips. Please note that since this advanced operators are sometimes used by spam-bot, black hat seos and other people google does not loves, you may bump in 403-Access denied screens like the one I showed to you in my Google hates Doughnuts (and Advanced Search Strings) article.
Don’t be scared if this happens, nothing is wrong with you / your pc / your search, is just google that it’s a little nervous
forces words to be included in search results. Useful with stop words that otherwise will be discarded
prevents a search term to show in results, for example searching for doughnut -cream can help you to avoid creamy doughnuts
returns documents with one of the given terms, like doughnut OR donut. You can also use | instead of OR: doughnut | donut
using quotes forces google to search for the exact phrase (including stop words), try “doughnut at midnight” and doughnut at midnight (actually, using quotes is similar, but not equals, to doughnut-at-midnight … it would be interesting to know what is the exact difference in SERP)
allow to search also for synonyms of the given word. searching for doughnut ~tips finds also pages with the word help or guide etc.
means every word. try “doughnuts with *”
Used to search in a range of numbers, “2..20 doughnuts” will find pages containing “I eat 3 doughnuts a day” and “I’ll never eat more than 15 doughnuts in a month”
This operators can be combined to create advanced queries, for example “I eat 1..100 doughnut OR doughnuts OR donut OR donuts each *”
Returns documents modified in the given time interval. Dates should be entered in julian format (so geeky, but a bit unusable).
Using doughnuts daterange:2454091-2454101 you can find who talked about doughnuts in the last ten days of 2006
returns links to documents with the given file type.
For example searching for doughnuts filetype:java will find portable and object-oriented doughnuts.
Currently officially supported file types are pdf, ps, wk1, wk2, wk3, wk4, wk5, wki, wks, wku, lwp, mw, xls, ppt, doc, wks, wps, wdb, wri, rtf, swf, ans, txt, but other are supported as well, like xml, cpp, java etc.
restricts the results to the given domain. site:mapelli.info will find all indexed page on www.mapelli.info, while site:mapelli.info doughnuts will find all doughnuts-related pages on www.mapelli.info .
update: you can use the site operator also to find your supplemental results using this query: site:www.mapelli.info *** -sljktf. (taken from an intresting article about Google Supplemental Index Results by Aaron Wall)
shows the cached version of given webpage. Other words in the query will be highlighted in the returned page, try cache:www.mapelli.info doughnuts
lists webpages that link to the given webpage. link:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doughnut will list webpages with links pointing to wikipedia’s voice for Doughnut
returns pages that google somehow thiks are related to the given page. Not always accurate.
returns some informations about the given web page. Typically website and description.
returns the definition of a given word. Try define:doughnuts (in case you are an alien and you don’t know what a Doughnut is
)
search in residential phone book. sample: phonebook:smith Los Angeles
returns stock info: try stocks:goog
weather informations for the given city. weather:los angeles
returns all movies related to the search term given. Sample: movie:doughnuts
You can also find movies by locations: movie:nyc , movie 10015
you can search for flights inside USA using the airport code (does not work for every airport). sample: jfk lax
Search for documents with the given words in their title. allintitle:doughnuts chocolate will find all the documents with title containing ‘doughnuts’ and ‘chocolate’. This operator cannot be combined with others.
Search for documents with the first word after the intitle operator in their title. intitle:doughnuts chocolate will find all the documents with title containing ‘doughnuts’ and talking about chocolate. Note that the word ‘chocolate’ is not necessarily in the title.
Search for documents with the given words in their text. allintext:doughnuts chocolate will find all the documents with text containing ‘doughnuts’ and ‘chocolate’.This operator cannot be combined with others.
Search for documents with the first word after the intext operator in their text. intext:doughnuts chocolate will find all the documents with text containing ‘doughnuts’ and talking about chocolate. Note that the word ‘chocolate’ is not necessarily in the text
Search for documents with the given words in their url. allinurl:doughnuts chocolate will find all the documents with url containing ‘doughnuts’ and ‘chocolate’. This operator cannot be combined with others.
Search for documents with the first word after the inurl operator in their url. inurl:doughnuts chocolate will find all the documents with url containing ‘doughnuts’ and talking about chocolate. Note that the word ‘chocolate’ is not necessarily in the text
Search for documents with the given words in an anchor. allinurl:doughnuts chocolate will find all the documents with anchor text containing ‘doughnuts’ and ‘chocolate’. This operator cannot be combined with others.
Search for documents with the first word after the operator in an anchor. inanchor:doughnuts chocolate will find all the documents with anchor containing ‘doughnuts’ and talking about chocolate. Note that the word ‘chocolate’ is not necessarily in an anchor.
you can use Google as a calculator, using standard symbols, for example
3+2 returns 5
4-1 returns 3
6*8 returns 48
15/5 returns 3
3^2 returns 9 (3 raised to power 2)
5%2 returns 1 (the remainder after division)
sqrt(49) returns 7, if you need non-square roots you can use for example 3th root of 27.
google calculator supports various trigonometic functions, expecting a radians value, that can be expressed also using the pi constant: sin(pi/2), tan (2/3*pi)
returns natural (base e) logarithm: ln(e^5)
returns base 10 logarithm: log(100)
returns n factorial: 3!
Numbers can be entered also in hexadecimal, octal and binary base, using 0x, 0o and 0b prefixes, for example 5 +0xf+0b1001
Google supports a lot of conversion tools, here is a small guide:
you can convert radians to degrees: pi/2 in degrees or convert degrees into radians: 90 degrees in radians
you can convert to each of the given bases: 16 in hex , 16 in octal, 16 in binary, 0×11 in decimal
you can also use 2007 in roman numerals (in case you’re building a temple and you need to know how to write the year on it)
you can use 100miles in km , 1m in mm, but also 200000 km in light-second etc.
just some samples:
100mph in kph
1 month in seconds
280 kelvin in celsius
50 fahrenheit in celsius
3 € in $ or 3 euros in dollars
I love this…
3 teaspoons in oz
1 cup + 1 tablespoon in teaspoon
There are a lot of others possible conversions, just try!
Have a look at my google blogsearch tips
74 Responses for "Google Search Tips (Ultimate Google Guide)"
Great tips on using the ole google machine.
thanks Dave!
Type “20/5=” (no quotes) in google.
Now, go forth and multiply, etc.
damn, I forgot the calculator!
thanks jomama
You forgot(?) the google calculator, e.g. 10$ in euros
Thanks guys, I’ll add a couple of pararaphs tomorrow
What’s “ecc?”
Thanks a lot!
“ecc” is a bug :). It was supposed to be “etc” … now I fixed it, thanks Ron.
Related to Terry’s comment, you also forgot the google unit Conversions. (not only currency conversion) e.g: “30 C = ? F” or “50 km = ? miles” or “23 inches = ? angstroms” or “51 mpg =? km/l”
good article!
Hi Emre, I was writing them as you posted your comment
thanks!
Very useful tips..for conversions in temperature, use the short form
50 f in c
You forgot the best one I’ve ever seen:
“convert 1.27 australian dollars per litre to us dollars per gallon” (no quotes)
Thank you very much. I’ve found your tutorial very interesting and useful. I think I’m among the lot of people that use to type some key words and then have to scan a large SERP for results. I hope I’ll be able to do faster and more accurate search with this help. Happy new year.
[…] Ultimate Google Search Guide | http://www.mapelli.info Ultimate Google Search Guide […]
Very good tips about google!
I will translate this into Portuguese and spread (when i have patience to do that ;)), if you don’t mind!
Keep the good job!
Oh my god! I am sorry about the spaming but i really need to post another comment. I just finished to read your article and its amazing! I am really fascinated, i want to translate it to PT, do you mind me to do that? Contact me to answer my question please!
Very nice job!
jmscavaleiro@gmail.com
You can’t convert numbers larger than 1001 to binary. I’m not exactly sure why . . .
[…] Ultimate Google Search Guide | http://www.mapelli.info (tags: google reference) […]
good ‘ol google
Thanks everybody, really.
Chris: The fuel conversion thing is really cool! how did you find it??
João: You’ve got mail
Saites: I’ve no problems converting large numbers to binary… look here. Can you please tell us something more? thanks.
[…] Ultimate Google Search Guide | http://www.mapelli.info (tags: Google Search tips guide reference SEO howto) […]
for firefox users:
https://addons.update.mozilla.org/firefox/2144/
and:
https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/977/
see you at radio out!
@fra
hmmm . . . It didn’t allow me to covert such large numbers before. Strange . . .
@humpty: thanks for the links!
@all: added the flights tip and the location-based movie search
[…] Google Blogsearch Tips (And a Little Wordpress Hack) Google blogsearch offers some of the default google search operators and other less-known operators. Here they are, with some tips and a wordpress hack Oh, as always, google is a little nervous when using advanced search strings, so sometimes it returns a 404 not found… it’s just trying to display the well-known 403 because it finds the search a bit suspicious… but the page is missing… […]
You’re still using ecc.
Look under the ~, and filetype.
fixed, again
thanks!
I really needed this, thanks
[…] Ultimate Google Search Guide | http://www.mapelli.info […]
Very good information. I will save this web page in favorites, Thanks!:-)
/me happy
thanks man… can come in handy
[…] As an example consider my google guide: it ranks #1 for ‘mapelli’ (my last name) on google, because it has been widely linked with the title of the page (that contains the domain name, i.e. http://www.mapelli.info), and google gives high relevance to inbound links text, while the same article is not in the top 100 results on yahoo. […]
Someone was eating donuts when writing a guide…
[…] Bonus Search Tip: Finding mp3 files with Google As an example of how powerful can be google when used with my ultimate google guide, here’s a little search query that allow you to find easily tons of mp3 […]
[…] Eso sería por ahora chicos, no puse todos los operadores disponibles ya que hay otros que son sólo pa los gringos (como la revisión de stock o la búsqueda de vuelos en aeropuertos gringos) de todas maneras les dejo un link a la página oficial de operadores en google en donde los encontrarán todos y un link al sitio donde encontré primero la información (mapelli.info) Posteado por MAD en How to?, Artículos | (Sin votos) Loading … […]
[…] Oh, you can do some search, it’s full of advanced operators (but you can’t use that too much) and hidden tips, and you really find what you need. But you’ve to keep in mind, when you click the “search” button, when you read your mail, or whan you find the nearest pizza, that they give you all this stuff for free because they’re selling your attention the the advertisers. […]
[…] Anyway, it works: the first result for “Miserable Failure” is no more George W. Bush biography (I’ll miss that) and the #1 ranking page for “mapelli” it’s now http://www.mapelli.info, instead of my google guide as it was before. This was not a result of a google bomb, but of something similar: the results of thousands of links pointing to that page with the page title (that included http://www.mapelli.info) I’m ok with the new results, it seems that they’ve really improved the search algorithm, but still, I’d like to have some more details of the changes in the algorithm used by google to find the “bad links” … I think they can be just the start of something big. Did you like this post? please, subscribe to my rss feed and share it:These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages. […]
[…] http://www.mapelli.info/tips/u.....tips-guide […]
[…] http://www.mapelli.info/tips/u.....tips-guide […]
This one’s at the top of my bookmarks, and gets used at least once a week - Thanks for the compilation!
p.s. We use the fuel conversion thing on our Nissan site (http://www.nicoclub.com).
[…] Google Search Tips (Ultimate Google Guide) […]
[…] course, if u think ur l33t enough u may opted for extra looooog google entry which u can find the howto here Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and […]
Very nice post - guess I won’t be writing it after all!
Thanks for the post. One of those topics ones always going to get around to looking at.
A handy tool of Google’s I use is Google Alerts. You can set up all your keyword searches such as “LCD HDTV” or “DLP Projectors” and have results delivered to your email inbox. Results can be just news items or “comprehensive” including blogs. You can set the search frequency - even to “as it happens” if a topic is running hot.
very handy! thanks!!
[…] Google Search Tips (Ultimate Google Guide)介紹了Google的Operator、Advanced Operator、算術功能及單世轉換器。 […]
Sorry to say your 1st point
google is not case sensitive: searching for doughnut is the same as DoughNuT
is wrong.
Google is case sensitive “in some cases” this is practically true. I have seen in some cases this is very rare. I saw it few months back.
I am working as Sr. SEO
[…] all the features they’ve got packed in that tiny little searchbox of theirs. There’s a lot of sites that explain some of these advanced features [google.com], but I’m more interested […]
Thanks for the post. People specailly webmasters always go to get around for this info.
Google Alerts, Analytics, Webmasters Tools, Keyword Tool are useful to check site status.
Very usefull - i try to translate it to spanish language. thanks.
[…] est un moteur de recherche dont les fonctions sont variées et nombreuses. Le blog Mapelli a rédigé un post rassemblant la quasi totalité des commandes fonctionnelles sur le moteur, afin […]
Could do with some now stuff like how to how Google measurers relevance’s Related to words, pages, sites
[…] If the OE guides don’t flick your switch, then there are plenty more out there, from the Small Business Hub, Dumb Little Man, The Guardian, a Google Guide Cheat Sheet and from Mapelli, ‘The Ultimate Google Guide.’ […]
hi
agree
[…] Google Search Tips (Ultimate Google Guide) | http://www.mapelli.info […]
I need a way to search html code. So you can find some things that may not be searchable otherwise. Like hidden links and some js code. Can it be done?
[…] Ultimate Google Search Tips Guide […]
Excellent stuff! i have found it very usefull and it has helped me allot for using search engine!
Thanks..
Excellent stuff! i have found it very usefull and it has helped me allot for using search engine!
You can also get rid of a lot of the spam results by including ‘-com’ in the search query.
I am getting the result below when I google (link:abufaris.com) my domain. What should I do?
Your search - link:abufaris.com - did not match any documents.
Ultimate Google Search Guide just found it and read it, hmmm….wish I’d found that ages ago! Trouble is I didn’t know it existed so I didn’t know to go looking for it! Oops, I thinkI may be heading for a circular argument here!
Seriously, great stuff, will be sharing that with my afternoon class, New Surfers Over 60!
I never knew that there are also keywords/ command for accurate searching in google. Thanks for the info.
You have a very comprehensive guide going over here. I don’t think you missed one thing, which is surprising given the massive amount of flexibility Google has to offer those who are doing searches. This post is definitely bookmark worthy.
This makes searching on the net a hell of a lot easier! Thanks for providing this info. It’s very helpful for Internet newbies like me. Cheers!
Very useful tips..for conversions in temperature, use the short form
50 f in c
[…] (Google really does have more search tricks than you can throw a stick at.) […]
google does so much stuff that people know nothing about, except geeks
this is a very useful tips..for learns. you have don a great job.
thanks: alex
I cannot find the search operator “NOT”. Every thing else seems to pop up in the various help lists except “NOT”. Please help me!
Roger.
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