![]() ![]() The Plan was adopted by the Salesforce Board of Directors in July 2014, in accordance with New York Stock Exchange Rule 303A.08. In the next Salesforce Global Search Tips: we’ll cover Search Order and Search Tips.SAN FRANCISCO-( BUSINESS WIRE)-Salesforce (NYSE: CRM), the #1 AI CRM, today announced it has granted equity awards under its 2014 Inducement Equity Incentive Plan (the "Plan") to new employees who joined Salesforce in connection with the acquisition of Airkit.ai. For example, a search for “monday meeting” finds items that contain monday meeting, but not items that contain monday afternoon meeting or monday’s meeting. This is the same as selecting Exact phrase in Global Search. ![]() Grouped search terms are evaluated before other search terms in your string.įind an exact phrase. For example, acme AND NOT california finds items that have the word acme but not the word california. For example, acme OR california finds items with either acme or california or both.įinds items that don’t contain the search term. However, when searching articles, documents, files, and solutions on their respective tabs, AND must be used because OR is the default operator for these objects on their tabs.įinds items with at least one of the search terms. Using AND is optional in most cases, because searching for acme california is the same as searching for acme AND california. For example, acme AND california finds items with the word acme and the word california, but not items with only the word acme. For example, type jo in the search box, then select Search for jo* (starts with) to find joan, john, johnson, and other matches that start with jo.įinds items that match all of the search terms. When entering search terms in Salesforce Global Search, the search box drop-down list gives you the option to search for your term with an * added to the end.You can’t use wildcards in the middle of Chinese, Japanese, Korean, or Thai search terms.For example, “my wo?d” matches my wood and my word. You can’t search for a ? or * in a search phrase that is enclosed in quotation marks or when Exact phrase is selected in the search scope because they function as wildcards.Likewise, 1?3 matches 123 and 143, but not 1a3 or 1b3. For example, aa*a matches aaaa and aabcda, but not aa2a or aa.!//a, and p?n matches pin and pan, but not p1n or p!n. Wildcards take on the type of the preceding character.Salesforce Global Search Wildcard Behavior and Limitations For example, a search for jo?n finds items with the term john or joan but not jon or johan. Question marks match only one character in the middle (not the beginning or end) of your search term. You can use an * at the beginning of a search term in a standard lookup search. A search for mi* meyers finds items with mike meyers or michael meyers. For example, a search for john* finds items that start with variations on the term john, such as, johnson or johnny. ![]() You can also use the AND, OR, AND NOT, ( ) (parentheses), and ” ” (quotation marks) operators to refine results.Īsterisks match one or more characters at the middle or end (not the beginning) of your search term. For example, searching for bob jo* finds items with Bob Jones and Bob Johnson, and searching for jo?n finds items with john and joan. Use * to match one or more characters, or ? to match a single character. You can use the * (asterisk) and ? (question mark) wildcards to refine results. This week, we cover Global Search wildcards and operators, wildcard behaviors and limitations. Last week, the StarrForce Tips Blog covered changing Salesforce Global Search options and search terms: Salesforce Global Search Tips – Part 2, Our Salesforce Best Practice of the Week. ![]()
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