| This application enables you to search the Valuation Office
Agency's Internet site for a specific piece of information. Key
in the word or phrase you are interested in, and then click search.
You can select your preferences for limiting the number of successful
hits returned, the number of hits on the results page, and whether
you wish to search for a specific word or phrase.
Beginning a Search
The Site Search Page is designed to help you get to the information
you're after with the minimum amount of effort. Type in the word
or phrase you wish to investigate and adjust the preferences if
required. By default Site Search will limit the number of appropriate
documents retrieved to 250, but you may choose to increase this
to 500 or maybe even 1000. By default, the each results page will
display 10 document titles, but you may wish to drop this down to
5 or increase it to 15 document titles per page.
The Search button starts things going, and the Clear button resets
the form including all the default preferences.
Searches produce a list of documents that contain the word or phrase,
no matter where they appear in the text. This list gives the rules
for formulating queries:
- Queries are not case-sensitive, so you can type your query in
uppercase or lowercase.
- You can search for any word except for common or "noise"
words (for English, this includes a, an, and, as, and other common
words), which are ignored during a search.
- Common or "noise" words are treated as placeholders
in phrase and proximity queries. If you searched for “Word
for Windows”, the results could give you “Word for
Windows” and “Word and Windows”, because for
is a noise word.
- Punctuation marks such as the period (.), colon (:), semicolon
(;), and comma (,) are ignored during a search.
To use specially treated characters such as &, |, ^, #, @,
$, (, ), in a query, enclose your query in quotation marks (“).
- To search for a word or phrase containing quotation marks,
enclose the entire phrase in quotation marks and then double the
quotation marks around the word or words you want to surround
with quotes. For example, “World-Wide Web or ““Web”””
searches for World-Wide Web or “Web”.
- You can insert Boolean
operators (AND, OR, and NOT) and the proximity
operator (NEAR) to specify additional search information.
- The wildcard character
(*) can match words with a given prefix. The query esc* matches
the terms “ESC,” “escape,” and so on.
Boolean and Proximity Operators
Boolean and proximity operators can create a more precise query.
| To Search For |
Example |
Results |
| Both terms in the same page |
<>access and basic —Or—
<> access & basic |
Pages with both the words "access"
and "basic" |
| Either term in a page |
<>cgi or isapi
—Or—
<>cgi | isapi |
Pages with the words "cgi" or "isapi"
|
| The first term without the second term |
<>access and not basic
—Or—
<> access & ! basic |
Pages with the word "access" but not
"basic" |
| Pages not matching a property value |
<>not @size = 100
—Or—
<> ! @size = 100 |
Pages that are not 100 bytes |
| Both terms in the same page, close together |
<>excel near project
—Or—
<> excel ~ project |
Pages with the word "excel" near the
word "project" |
Hints:
- You can add parentheses to nest expressions within a query. The expressions in
parentheses are evaluated before the rest of the query.
- Use double quotes (") to indicate that a Boolean or NEAR operator
keyword should be ignored in your query. For example, "Abbott and Costello" will
match pages with the phrase, not pages that match the Boolean expression. In addition to
being an operator, the word and is a noise word in English.
- The NEAR operator is similar to the AND operator in
that NEAR returns a match if both words being searched for are in the
same page. However, the NEAR operator differs from AND
because the rank assigned by NEAR depends on the proximity of words. That
is, the rank of a page with the searched-for words closer together is greater than or
equal to the rank of a page where the words are farther apart. If the searched-for words
are more than 50 words apart, they are not considered near enough, and the page is
assigned a rank of zero.
- The NOT operator can be used only after an AND
operator in content queries; it can be used only to exclude pages that match a previous
content restriction. For property value queries, the NOT operator can be
used apart from the AND operator.
- The AND operator has a higher precedence than OR. For
example, the first three queries are equal, but the fourth is not:a AND b OR c
c OR a AND b
c OR (a AND b)
(c OR a) AND b
Note The NEAR operator can be applied only to words
or phrases.
Wildcards
Wildcard operators help you find pages containing words similar to a given word.
| To Search For |
Example |
Results |
| Words with the same prefix |
comput* |
Pages with words that have the prefix "comput,"
such as "computer," "computing," and so
on |
| Words based on the same stem word |
fly** |
Pages with words based on the same stem as "fly,"
such as "flying," "flown," "flew,"
and so on |
Search Results
Site Search Results Page gives you details of the documents that matched your
query, and gives you links to each document.
       
|
|
9698 page 2 |
  |
|
http://www.voa.gov.uk/publications/charters/9698/9698_2.html
size 4,933 bytes - 04/04/2002 08:32:44 GMT |
You will have set the maximum number of documents to be returned
and the number of documents presented per results page when you
began your search. An example of a document retrieved and presented
by Site Search is reproduced above. Site Search will give
each document a ranking, based on how closely it matches the query
you gave. The documents are presented in descending order
of ranking, so the most appropriate documents will be at the top
of the retrieved list. In addition a ranking is presented
by way of red spots next to the document order number. The
more spots there are, the more relevant the document is. The
maximum number of spots is ten. In the example shown the document
has nine spots indicating that it was very likely to encompass the
required piece of information.
The full address of the document is presented as a link to enable you to study the
document as it is found in the Instructions. The title of the document is also a
link to it. The size of the document file, together with the date and time it was
most recently updated is also shown.
Summary
The Summary option gives you the opportunity to
see where the word or phrase given appears in the document retrieved.
Sticking with the example given above, an extract from a summary
page is reproduced below. To give you an indication of context,
the words either side of the specified word or phrase are also shown
in the Summary page.
... APPENDIX 22
APPENDIX 22
CGT - Indexation Allowance 1. Disposals between
6.4.82 and 5.4.85 (1.4.82 and 31.3.85 for companies)
The allowance under ss.86 and 87 FA 1982 was ...
Full
The Full option enables you to see the whole document and
exactly where the word or phrase appears within it. Within
the Full page you can hop to each instance of the word or phrase
within the retrieved document. An extract from a Full page
is reproduced below.
APPENDIX 22
APPENDIX 22
CGT - << Indexation>> Allowance 1. Disposals between 6.4.82 and
5.4.85 (1.4.82 and 31.3.85 for companies)
The allowance under ss.86 and 87 FA 1982 was calculated by applying
an << indexation>>
factor to the actual acquisition cost and any other items of allowable
expenditure. The factor was calculated by using the formula:-
Expenditure RD - RI
RI
|