Important Update: Cohesity Products Documentation
All Cohesity product documentation are now managed via the Cohesity Docs Portal: https://docs.cohesity.com/HomePage/Content/home.htm. Some documentation available here may not reflect the latest information or may no longer be accessible.
Arctera™ Personal Archive Help
- Getting started
- About Arctera Personal Archive
- Prerequisites for Arctera Personal Archive
- Compatibility and the latest updates
- Known Issues
- Accessing new Arctera Personal Archive portal
- Logging in
- About Email Continuity
- About legacy data
- Setting application preferences
- Resetting a forgotten password
- Changing your message view
- Managing archives and archived messages
- Managing InsightBooks
- Managing searches
- About Arctera Personal Archive Search
- Using Quick Search
- Using Advanced Search
- Using folder search
- Creating a new search
- About Hit Highlighting
- Search syntax
- About stop words and special characters in searches
- Boolean operator searches
- Wildcard searches
- Proximity searches
- Double-byte character set searches
- About enhanced searches in Japanese
- Using Search Filters
- Creating Saved Searches
- Updating Saved Searches
- Deleting Saved Searches
- Searchable attachment types
- Arctera Personal Archive Search FAQs
- Managing tags
About using multiple Boolean operators
You can use multiple Boolean operators in a search to create more complex searches. For example:
cloud AND computing OR public
In this example cloud AND computing represents one term.
The following items are returned:
Items with cloud and computing
Items with cloud, computing, and public
Items with public
You can also use brackets to group multiple terms for Boolean processing. For example:
(cloud (computing OR public)) NOT software
In this example, the space between cloud and (computing OR public) is treated as an AND operator.
The following items are returned:
Items with both cloud and computing, with no reference to software.
Items with both cloud and public, with no reference to software.
The maximum number of Boolean operators that is allowed in a search is 249.