As part of our ongoing mission to improve our network of sites for our users, we're working on improving search.
As some of you may have already noticed, we have begun recording metrics on the use of our search on Stack Overflow. From those metrics we have decided on some tests we're going to run as well as some improvements that we plan to make. We've also decided for the most part on precisely how we're going to measure the success or failure of these changes.
Some of the coming search improvements we plan to apply will change the way that search results are calculated. Effectively, we will be introducing some level of "fuzziness" - that is to say that you should get relevant results for most of your searches, even if you didn't spell every word correctly, added a few extra words, or didn't match a question title verbatim. In short, the theory is that most searches will get more relevant results, and there will be fewer low or 0 results searches in general, thus improving the search experience.
One thing that has come up which we don't have the ability to draw conclusions on is negative searching. Negative searching is people searching for specific phrases or words with the goal of getting few or no results. Based on our current metrics, we hypothesize that this might be happening on our sites. We think it might be our users searching for an answer to their question prior to asking the question (users of our sites often strive to avoid asking duplicated questions). However, the truth is that we don't know for sure.
If negative searches are a valuable thing for our users, a fuzzy search may destroy the functionality. That's where the community and human factor come in. Given that not everything can be quantitatively measured, I ask you this:
- If you use our search to perform negative searches, why? Do you feel it works well?
Direct feedback to this question greatly appreciated in the form of an answer. Use comments for commentary.
"
.Exact
,Exact, case irrelevant
andFuzzy
(as default option). I mostly use Fuzzy, but if many results or lots in unhelpful context, the others are useful to be able to fall back on. It seems from what you are looking to hold in the indexes would easily suffice for a good exact or two.