| | 1 | = Using Search = |
| | 2 | |
| | 3 | Trac has a built-in search engine to allow finding occurrences of keywords and substrings in wiki pages, tickets and changeset descriptions. |
| | 4 | |
| | 5 | Using the Trac search facility is straightforward and its interface should be familiar to most www users. |
| | 6 | |
| | 7 | Apart from the [search: Search module], you will also find a small search field above the navigation bar at all time. It provides convenient access to the search module from all pages. |
| | 8 | |
| | 9 | == Quickjumps == |
| | 10 | For intermediate and advanced use, Trac has a useful way to quickly navigate to a given resource, named '''quickjumps'''. |
| | 11 | |
| | 12 | If you enter a [wiki:TracLinks TracLink] in the search field above the navigation bar, Trac will recognize this and assume you know where you're going. |
| | 13 | |
| | 14 | For example: |
| | 15 | |
| | 16 | * ![42] -- Opens change set 42 |
| | 17 | * !#42 -- Opens ticket number 42 |
| | 18 | * !{1} -- Opens report 1 |
| | 19 | |
| | 20 | '''Note:''' ''This is a particularly useful feature to quickly navigate to a specific issue ticket or changeset.'' |
| | 21 | |
| | 22 | === Advanced: Disabling Quickjumps === |
| | 23 | To disable the quickjump feature for a search keyword - for example when searching for occurences of the literal word !TracGuide - begin the query with an exclamation mark (!). |
| | 24 | |
| | 25 | ---- |
| | 26 | See also: TracGuide, TracLinks, TracQuery |