Searching within the library
The search bar is located in the icon bar.
To make the cursor jump to the search field, you can:
Click in the search field.
Press Ctrl + F.
Search history
To find the search history, you can right click in the search field. Only ten recent searches will be displayed in the sub-menu. You can find clear history button under your search history.
Search settings
At the right of the search text field, 2 buttons allow for selecting some settings:
Regular expressions
Whether or not the search query uses regular expressions.
Case sensitivity
Whether or not the search query is case sensitive.
Simple search
In a normal search, the program searches your library for all occurrences of the words in your search string, once you entered it. Only entries containing all words will be considered matches. To search for sequences of words, enclose the sequences in double-quotes. For instance, the query progress "marine aquaculture" will match entries containing both the word "progress" and the phrase "marine aquaculture".
All entries that do not match are hidden, leaving for display the matching entries only.
To stop displaying the search results, just clear the search field, press Esc or click on the "Clear" (X
) button.
Search using regular expressions
Make sure that the button "regular expressions" is activated
General syntax
In order to only search for content within specific fields and/or to include logical operators in the search expression, a special syntax is available in which these can be specified. Both the field specification and the search term support regular expressions.
Search within specific Fields
To search for entries whose author contains miller, enter: author = miller
. The =
sign is actually a shorthand for contains
. Searching for an exact match is possible using matches
or ==
.
Search for terms containing spaces
If the search term contains spaces, enclose it in quotes. Do not use spaces in the field specification! E.g to search for entries with the title "image processing", type: title = "image processing"
Search using parentheses, and
, or
and not
and
, or
and not
To search for entries with the title or the keyword "image processing", type: title|keywords = "image processing"
. To search for entries without the title or the keyword "image processing", type: title|keywords != "image processing"
It is also possible to chain search expressions. In general, you can use and
, or
, not
, and parentheses as intuitively expected:
(author = miller or title|keywords = "image processing") and not author = brown and != author = blue
Logical Operator / Symbol | Explanation |
---|---|
XY | X followed by Y |
X|Y | Either X or Y |
(X) | X, as a capturing group |
!= | tests if the search term is not contained in the field (equivalent to |
Regular Expression search and Field Types
The selection of field types to search (required, optional, all) is always overruled by the field specification in the search expression. If a field is not given, all fields are searched. For example, video and year == 1932
will search for entries with any field containing video
and the field year
being exactly 1932
.
Pseudo fields
JabRef defines the following pseudo fields:
Pseudo field | Purpose | Example |
| Search in any field |
|
| Search among the keywords |
|
| Search for citation keys |
|
| Search for entries of a certain type |
|
Advanced use of regular expressions
Regular expressions (RegEx for short) define a language for representing patterns matching text, for example when searching. There are different types of RegEx languages. JabRef uses regular expressions as defined in Java. For extensive advanced information about Java's RegEx patterns, please have a look at the Java documentation and at the Java tutorial.
Regular expressions and casing
By default, regular expressions do not account for upper/lower casing. Hence, while the examples below are all in lower case, they match also upper- and mixed case strings.
If casing is important to your search, activate the case-sensitive button.
Searching for entries with an empty or missing field
.
means: any character+
means: one or more times
author != .+
returns entries with empty or no author field.
^
means: the beginning of a line[a-zA-Z]
means: a through z or A through Z, inclusive (range)$
means: the end of a lineX{n}
means: X, exactly n times
owner != ^[a-zA-Z]{3}$
returns empty and non-three-letter owners
Searching for a given word
\b
means: word boundary\B
means: not a word boundary
keywords = \buv\b
matches uv but not lluvia (it does match uv-b however)
author = \bblack\b
matches black but neither blackwell nor blacker
author == black
does not match john black, but author = \bblack\b
does.
author = \bblack\B
matches blackwell and blacker, but not black.
Searching with optional spelling
?
means: none or one copy of the preceding character.{n,m}
means: at least n, but not more than m copies of the preceding character.[ ]
defines a character class
title =neighbou?r
matches neighbour and neighbor, and also neighbours and neighbors, and neighbouring and neighboring, etc.
title = neighbou?rs?\b
matches neighbour and neighbor, and also neighbours and neighbors, but neither neighbouring nor neighboring.
author = s[aá]nchez
matches sanchez and sánchez.
abstract = model{1,2}ing
matches modeling and modelling.
abstract = modell?ing
also matches modeling and modelling.
year == 200[5-9]|201[0-1]
specifies the range of years 2005-2011 (200[5-9]
specifies years 2005-2009;|
means "or"; 201[0-1]
specifies years 2010-2011).
author = (John|Doe)
matches entries written by either John or Doe.
author = (John|Doe).+(John|Doe)
matches entries written by both John or Doe.
Searching for strings with a special character (()[]{}\^-=$!|?*+.
)
()[]{}\^-=$!|?*+.
)If a special character (i.e. (
)
[
]
{
}
\
^
-
=
$
!
|
?
*
+
.
) is included in your search string, it has to be escaped with a backslash, such as \}
for }
.
It means that to search for a string including a backslash, two consecutive backslashes (\\
) have to be used: abstract = xori{\\c{c}}o
matches xoriço.
Searching for strings with double quotation marks ("
)
"
)The character "
has a special meaning: it is used to group words into phrases for exact matches. So, if you search for a string that includes a double quotation, the double quotation character has to be replaced with the hexadecimal character 22 in ASCII table \x22
.
Neither a simple backslash \"
, nor a double backslash \\"
will work as an escape for "
. Neither author = {\"o}quist
with regular expression disabled, nor author = \{\\\"O\}quist
with regular expression enabled, will find anything, even if the name {\"o}quist
exists in the library.
Hence, to search for {\"o}quist
as an author, you must input author = \{\\\x22o\}quist
, with regular expressions enabled (Note: the \
, {
, _
and the }
are escaped with a backslash; see above).
Greedy quantifiers
Quantifier | Explanation |
---|---|
X? | X, once or not at all |
X* | X, zero or more times |
X+ | X, one or more times |
X{n} | X, exactly n times |
X{n,} | X, at least n times |
X{n,m} | X, at least n but not more than m times |
Reluctant quantifiers
Quantifier | Explanation |
---|---|
X?? | X, once or not at all |
X*? | X, zero or more times |
X+? | X, one or more times |
X{n}? | X, exactly n times |
X{n,}? | X, at least n times |
X{n,m}? | X, at least n but not more than m times |
Possessive quantifiers
Quantifier | Explanation |
---|---|
X?+ | X, once or not at all |
X*+ | X, zero or more times |
X++ | X, one or more times |
X{n}+ | X, exactly n times |
X{n,}+ | X, at least n times |
X{n,m}+ | X, at least n but not more than m times |
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