Skip to Main Content
We are working to upgrade the research experience by making ongoing improvements to our Research Guides.
You may encounter changes in the look and feel of the Research Guides website along with structural changes to our existing guides. If you have any questions or concerns about this process please let us know.

OneSearch User's Guide

Boolean Operators

OneSearch offers the following Boolean operations: AND, OR, NOT, +, -

The use of these ALL CAPS characters can be used to make queries more specific. By default, all terms in a search are combined with the AND operator

To expand the results set, use the OR operator: marijuana OR cannabis will return items that contain either term.  

This can be combined with phrases such as “side effects” OR “health effects.” 

To do this search by hand, enter this phrase into the search box:

      marijuana OR cannabis AND ("side effects" OR "health effects")

This will search for both marijuana OR cannabis related to "side effects" or "health effects." 

Use the “+” character directly before a term to indicate that it must be included in the results. When searching for “snow +cold OR avalanche” the word “cold” will be included in all results.  

To exclude items in OneSearch, use the NOT operator or “-” character before a term. When used in the following query “animal NOT dog” the results will not include the term “dog.” 

Wildcards

Searches within OneSearch can be performed using the wildcards ? and *

The question mark (?) will match any one character and can be used to find “Olsen” or “Olson” by searching for “Ols?n.”

The asterisk (*) will match zero or more characters within a word or at the end of a word. A search for “Ch*ter” would match “Charter,” “Character,” and “Chapter.” When used at the end of a word, such as “Temp*,” it will match all suffixes “Temptation,” “Temple” and “Temporary.” 

Wildcards cannot be used as the first character of a search.

Searching Specific Fields

The single search box in OneSearch (basic search box or keyword search box in advanced search) will search across many fields automatically. For example, entering an ISBN, ISSN, or Call Number will bring back associated records.

You can explicitly search a field using the syntax: “field:(query).” For example, the search ISSN:(1234-5678), finds records that contain that value in the ISSN field.

Searchable fields:

  • Title
  • SubjectTerms
  • Author
  • Publication Title

as well as 

  • Abstract
  • Call Number
  • CODEN
  • DEWEY
  • DOI
  • ISBN
  • ISSN
  • Edition
  • Full Text
  • Genre
  • Geographic Information
  • Issue
  • OCLC Number
  • Patent Number
  • Publisher
  • Series
  • Time Period
  • Volume

Finding Career Information in OneSearch

To include or exclude concepts, ideas and topics in your search, use the operators AND, OR and NOT:

  • career development planning
  • career planning
  • careers
  • education
  • employment
  • higher education
  • job hunting
  • salary
  • training
  • wages

Using two or more of these concepts, ideas and topics with AND will yield more specific results:

  • careers AND employment
  • careers AND salaries OR wages
  • higher education AND salary
  • training AND development
  • wages AND education

Of course, you can always add standard limiters such as:

  • "United States"
  • internship

Remember to use "quotation marks" around phrases for more specific results.

Other Search Tips

Enclose phrases in quotes to retrieve words next to each other in the specified order:  “citizen journalism” 

Proximity to Other Words

Enclose your search terms in quotes and use the tilde (~) followed by a number. Example: “yeast bread”~10 finds material where “yeast” and “bread” appear within 10 words of each other in the specified order. 

Wildcard Use:

The question mark (?) will match any one character. For example, it can be used to find "Olsen" or "Olson" by searching for "Ols?n"

The asterisk (*) will match zero or more characters within a word or at the end of a word. A search for 

   Ch*ter

will match "Charter," "Character," and "Chapter."

When used at the end of a word, the asterisk will allow all possible characters to be included so 

   Temp*

will match "Temptation," "Temple," and "Temporary."

Last updated on Feb 22, 2024 12:30 PM