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wim
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Suppose I'm a beginner and I'm confused about my string C:\\having\\double\\backslashes

I search for backslashes appear twice python and I get one result. This one result doesn't answer my question. Even worse, it's totally unrelated and useless for me. It just happened to contain every word of the query, sparsely distributed, and that's it.

If the search engine was any good, it would find me this result: Why do backslashes appear twice?

This one perfectly clarifies my problem. It's a question tagged , but it and does mention the word Python several times in the answers. It doesn't mention Python in the title, and the community appears to be in the habit of editing tags out of the title in the first place. It's also the top result for backslashes appear twice. How is it that adding the word python into the query has actually defeated the search result?

NowTo filter by tags, I know that I need to search for backslashes appear twice [python], because I'm an experienced user of the site for 10 years. But a new user is not going to know that. They're just going to ask the question again, even though we already have the perfect and high quality answer already on site for it. Maybe a community member will chastise them for not using the search. But it's not entirely their fault, and the UI has to take some of the blame here.

Can we make the search better, please? At the very least, include tags in the query text.

Suppose I'm a beginner and I'm confused about my string C:\\having\\double\\backslashes

I search for backslashes appear twice python and I get one result. This one result doesn't answer my question. Even worse, it's totally unrelated and useless for me. It just happened to contain every word of the query, sparsely distributed, and that's it.

If the search engine was any good, it would find me this result: Why do backslashes appear twice?

This one perfectly clarifies my problem. It's a question tagged , but it doesn't mention Python in the title, and the community appears to be in the habit of editing tags out of the title in the first place.

Now I know that I need to search for backslashes appear twice [python], because I'm an experienced user of the site for 10 years. But a new user is not going to know that. They're just going to ask the question again, even though we already have the perfect and high quality answer already on site for it. Maybe a community member will chastise them for not using the search. But it's not entirely their fault, and the UI has to take some of the blame here.

Can we make the search better, please? At the very least, include tags in the query text.

Suppose I'm a beginner and I'm confused about my string C:\\having\\double\\backslashes

I search for backslashes appear twice python and I get one result. This one result doesn't answer my question. Even worse, it's totally unrelated and useless for me. It just happened to contain every word of the query, sparsely distributed, and that's it.

If the search engine was any good, it would find me this result: Why do backslashes appear twice?

This one perfectly clarifies my problem. It's a question tagged , and does mention the word Python several times in the answers. It doesn't mention Python in the title, and the community appears to be in the habit of editing tags out of the title in the first place. It's also the top result for backslashes appear twice. How is it that adding the word python into the query has actually defeated the search result?

To filter by tags, I know that I need to search for backslashes appear twice [python], because I'm an experienced user of the site for 10 years. But a new user is not going to know that. They're just going to ask the question again, even though we already have the perfect and high quality answer already on site for it. Maybe a community member will chastise them for not using the search. But it's not entirely their fault, and the UI has to take some of the blame here.

Can we make the search better, please? At the very least, include tags in the query text.

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wim
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  • 66

Suppose I'm a beginner and I'm confused about my string C:\\having\\double\\backslashes

I search for backslashes appear twice python and I get one result. This one result doesn't answer my question. Even worse, it's totally unrelated and useless for me. It just happened to contain every word of the query, sparsely distributed, and that's it.

If the search engine was any good, it would find me this result: Why do backslashes appear twice?

This one perfectly clarifies my problem. It's a question tagged , but it doesn't mention Python in the title, and the community appears to be in the habit of editing tags out of the title in the first place.

Now I know that I need to search for "backslashes appear twice [python]"search for backslashes appear twice [python], because I amI'm an experienced user of the site for 10 years. But a new user is not going to know that. They're just going to ask the question again, even though we already have the perfect and high quality answer already on site for it. Maybe a community member will chastise them for not using the search. But it's not entirely their fault, and the UI has to take some of the blame here.

Can we make the search better, please? At the very least, include tags in the query text.

Suppose I'm a beginner and I'm confused about my string C:\\having\\double\\backslashes

I search for backslashes appear twice python and I get one result. This one result doesn't answer my question. Even worse, it's totally unrelated and useless for me. It just happened to contain every word of the query, sparsely distributed, and that's it.

If the search engine was any good, it would find me this result: Why do backslashes appear twice?

This one perfectly clarifies my problem. It's a question tagged , but it doesn't mention Python in the title, and the community appears to be in the habit of editing tags out of the title in the first place.

Now I know that I need to search for "backslashes appear twice [python]", because I am an experienced user of the site for 10 years. But a new user is not going to know that. They're just going to ask the question again, even though we already have the perfect and high quality answer already on site for it. Maybe a community member will chastise them for not using the search. But it's not entirely their fault, and the UI has to take some of the blame here.

Can we make the search better, please? At the very least, include tags in the query text.

Suppose I'm a beginner and I'm confused about my string C:\\having\\double\\backslashes

I search for backslashes appear twice python and I get one result. This one result doesn't answer my question. Even worse, it's totally unrelated and useless for me. It just happened to contain every word of the query, sparsely distributed, and that's it.

If the search engine was any good, it would find me this result: Why do backslashes appear twice?

This one perfectly clarifies my problem. It's a question tagged , but it doesn't mention Python in the title, and the community appears to be in the habit of editing tags out of the title in the first place.

Now I know that I need to search for backslashes appear twice [python], because I'm an experienced user of the site for 10 years. But a new user is not going to know that. They're just going to ask the question again, even though we already have the perfect and high quality answer already on site for it. Maybe a community member will chastise them for not using the search. But it's not entirely their fault, and the UI has to take some of the blame here.

Can we make the search better, please? At the very least, include tags in the query text.

Rollback to Revision 4
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wim
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I know that [python] will match the tag, but beginners might not.

Suppose I'm a beginner and I'm confused about my string C:\\having\\double\\backslashes

I search for backslashes appear twice python and I get one result. This one result doesn't answer my question. Even worse, it's totally unrelated and useless for me. It just happened to contain every word of the query, sparsely distributed, and that's it.

If the search engine was any good, it would find me this result: Why do backslashes appear twice?

This one perfectly clarifies my problem. It's a question tagged , but it doesn't mention Python in the title, and the community appears to be in the habit of editing tags out of the title in the first place.

Now I know that I need to search for "backslashes appear twice [python]", because I am an experienced user of the site for 10 years. But a new user is not going to know that. They're just going to ask the question again, even though we already have the perfect and high quality answer already on site for it. Maybe a community member will chastise them for not using the search. But it's not entirely their fault, and the UI has to take some of the blame here.

Can we make the search better, please? At the very least, include tags in the query text.

I know that [python] will match the tag, but beginners might not.

Suppose I'm a beginner and I'm confused about my string C:\\having\\double\\backslashes

I search for backslashes appear twice python and I get one result. This one result doesn't answer my question. Even worse, it's totally unrelated and useless for me. It just happened to contain every word of the query, sparsely distributed, and that's it.

If the search engine was any good, it would find me this result: Why do backslashes appear twice?

This one perfectly clarifies my problem. It's a question tagged , but it doesn't mention Python in the title, and the community appears to be in the habit of editing tags out of the title in the first place.

Now I know that I need to search for "backslashes appear twice [python]", because I am an experienced user of the site for 10 years. But a new user is not going to know that. They're just going to ask the question again, even though we already have the perfect and high quality answer already on site for it. Maybe a community member will chastise them for not using the search. But it's not entirely their fault, and the UI has to take some of the blame here.

Can we make the search better, please? At the very least, include tags in the query text.

Suppose I'm a beginner and I'm confused about my string C:\\having\\double\\backslashes

I search for backslashes appear twice python and I get one result. This one result doesn't answer my question. Even worse, it's totally unrelated and useless for me. It just happened to contain every word of the query, sparsely distributed, and that's it.

If the search engine was any good, it would find me this result: Why do backslashes appear twice?

This one perfectly clarifies my problem. It's a question tagged , but it doesn't mention Python in the title, and the community appears to be in the habit of editing tags out of the title in the first place.

Now I know that I need to search for "backslashes appear twice [python]", because I am an experienced user of the site for 10 years. But a new user is not going to know that. They're just going to ask the question again, even though we already have the perfect and high quality answer already on site for it. Maybe a community member will chastise them for not using the search. But it's not entirely their fault, and the UI has to take some of the blame here.

Can we make the search better, please? At the very least, include tags in the query text.

TL:DR summary at the top. Should also head off the urge that many people feel to explain the [tag] syntax before they get to the last part of the answer that covers it.
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Peter Cordes
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Active reading [<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sentence_clause_structure#Run-on_sentences>].
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Peter Mortensen
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