Using search parameters with special characters
You can use special characters such as ?, *, and \, when searching
for files and strings, based on the following rules.
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
| * | Searches all items. |
| abc* | Searches for items that begin with the characters abc, for example, abcd or abctest. |
| *abc | Searches for items ending with the characters abc, for example, dabc or testabc. |
| *b* | Searches for items that have the character b anywhere in the name. |
| a*c | Searches for items that begin with the character a and end with the character c. |
| "a*" | Searches for items within quotation marks that start with the character a, for example, "a," "ab," or "ad." Note that when you use quotation marks, the specification becomes case sensitive. |
| abc? | Searches for four-character items that begin with the characters abc and have a single fourth character, for example, abcd. |
| ?abc | Searches for four-character items that begin with a single character and end in abc, for example, dabc. |
| ?b? | Searches for three-character items that have a b in the middle, for example, abc. |
| a?c | Searches for three-character items that have the character a and c with a single character in between. |
| ab? | Searches for three-character items that start with ab and end in a third single character, for example, abc. |
| a\* or a\? | Searches for characters where the * and ? are interpreted literally, for example, a* or a?. The slash represents an escape character. To use a slash literally, enter \\. |