Bridge to TexShare for Small/Rural Libraries
Bridge to TexShare for Small/Rural Libraries

Boolean Operators

Much of searching involves more than one keyword. If you have two or more search terms, you need to "tell" the search engine or database how those terms are related. Boolean operators allow you to state that relationship. They can help you narrow, broaden, or refine your search.

AND

You can narrow your search by using the AND operator. It is most useful when you are receiving too many results on your topic.

Boolean Operator AND Let's say that you are looking for information on dogs because you want to get one as a pet. If you just search for "dogs," your results will include any items that mention the word, such as materials on the movie Reservoir Dogs. To narrow your search, you can type in "dogs AND pets." Now the materials have to mention both words to show up in your results list, so it is much more likely that any item talks about dogs in relation to having pets.

OR

You can broaden your search by using the OR operator. It will return results that use any one of your search terms. It is most useful when materials use several terms to talk about the same topic.

Boolean Operator OR If you want to get a dog, but you are still deciding on the breed, then you can perform one search to research more than one breed at a time. For example, you might be trying to choose between a collie and a retriever. You can search for "collie OR retriever" to get information on either breed in your results list.

NOT

If the results you are getting include way too many irrelevant items, you can refine your search by using the NOT operator. The term that comes after that operator will be excluded from your search results.

Boolean Operator NOT For instance, if you actually want a terrier for a pet, you might want to find information on the different types of terriers, but you know that you don't want to get a bull terrier. To exclude that breed from your search, you can phrase your search as "terrier NOT bull." Your results will include information on all other terriers, but not on bull terriers.

 

For More Information...

The 3 operators introduced above are the most common ones, but Boolean logic uses other operators as well. To get more advanced tips on searching with Boolean logic, you can use any of the tutorials below:

Also, be sure to check the help pages of the database or search engine that you are using to find more detailed information on how it handles Boolean logic.


This page was written by Mariela Hristova in Spring 2005.
This page was reviewed by John Reid in Spring 2006.
This page was reviewed by Lisa Charbonnet in Spring 2007.
INF 382S: Library Instruction and Information Literacy, taught by Dr. Loriene Roy
School of Information, The University of Texas at Austin


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