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On looking for F# I realized that results are wrong - looking for [F#] gives correct results though. My first thought was that it may have something to do with the '#' character but for 'c#', for example, it does not matter whether square brackets are included or not - the results are always the same.

Grateful for SO as it is. Will use it regardless this issue will be classified as a bug or a feature and far from pointing fingers at anybody. It just seems to me that providing consistent behaviour for 'f#' searches as for 'c#' searches will make SO even better.

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  • "f#" returns better results? Almost expect there is a line like this in the codebase if (search == "c#") { search = "[c#]"; }
    – rene
    Aug 16, 2014 at 10:45

1 Answer 1

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When you search for just c# it gets converted in a tag search because the SE search engine is programmed to treat the search string as a tag when a search string is one of the top 60 tags of the SE site. C# is in the top tag list whereas F# is not, so it is treated as a regular search.

So if you want to search for the word c# and not the tag then type "c#" as the search term.

Any individual search terms which map directly to the top 40 tags will be auto-converted to tag searches. So if you enter c++ entities

it will convert to

[c++] entities

automagically on your behalf.

Source: Stack Overflow Search – Now 61% Less Crappy

Update: Based on Nick Craver's comment, the value 40 has been changed to top 60 tags.

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  • So what you are saying is SO cannot do full text search queries by design? For as innocent query term as "F#" and natural language processing tools like nltk and the likes, I hardly see any challenges to do mapping of exact search terms to tags.
    – matcheek
    Aug 16, 2014 at 11:54
  • @matcheek For an exact match, you may enclose the search term in quotes, like "f#" Aug 16, 2014 at 11:58
  • yes I am aware of that. For me it's just slightly shocking that, given the potential accumulated on SO, such a trivial thing, which it is, has not been addressed yet. And we are not even talking about sofisticated stemmers and some AI running on top. It's basic one-to-one mapping.
    – matcheek
    Aug 16, 2014 at 12:01
  • @matcheek I am not sure if it is due to any technical limitation, I guess they just didn't want to do it that way. Some more info related to the search engine is available here: meta.stackexchange.com/questions/160100/… Aug 16, 2014 at 12:06

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