I remember doing both a Stack and Google search for DELETE *
in the not too distant past on a few occasions in regards to (MySQL) database-related questions where results were found.
I tried finding a duplicate for the following question that I saw this evening:
Yet, there were no results found which I find rather strange. I remember finding a few questions using the same syntax before, but not now.
I did use both php and mysql tags in my search as well as a deep Google search.
Is the asterisk
*
an issue from within Stack's (search) architecture, and/or a bug?Are we/am I now reverted to vote the question as a typo instead?
Edit:
As per a comment left by a member (approxiblue), I used code:"delete *" [mysql]
and it did find what I was looking for; a choice of questions to mark the question as a duplicate.
This is great, however I would like to know why I have to use that method now, rather than what I used to use, being just delete *
.
Edit #2:
Upon clicking on "Advanced Search Tips" that shows additional search options (that drops down) and going through https://stackoverflow.com/help/searching did not show the code:
option, yet the "help/searching" contains hascode:
. However that failed using hascode: "delete *" [mysql]
. I did not find the code:
option anywhere in that page or anywhere else on Stack.
- Is this an undocumented (search guru) feature?
code:"delete *"
.DELETE *
which I don't get. Plus, this also seems to have an effect on how Google searches Stack which no longer seems to be the case here. I did a very deep Google search with no results as I could before. I feel something changed with Stack's architecture.DELETE \*
and inside double quotes also.code:
option, yet the "help/searching" containshascode:
. However that failed usinghascode: "delete *" [mysql]
. I did not find thecode:
yet, unless you know where that is documented.code:
search option is marked status-completed here, but not officially documented.hascode
is worse, I haven't found any official acknowledgement, I learned about it here.hascode
might not have worked because of the space between the colon and the quote. Note that thecode
example given doesn't have that. (I haven't tried it; this is a guess)code:"delete *"
is what worked as previously stated, but the reason is still unclear in regards to my original question.