I was searching for a specific topic using the keyword "UseOAuthAuthentication":
https://stackoverflow.com/search?q=useoauthauthentication
Unfortunately, the results did not include Integrating ASP.NET code to Active Directory or LDAP after deploying on Bluemix, which contains a line of code:
app.UseOAuthAuthentication(options);
I tried adding "Bluemix" to the search (which appears in the title), but SO's search still can't find it:
https://stackoverflow.com/search?q=UseOAuthAuthentication+bluemix
Not even code:
helps:
https://stackoverflow.com/search?q=bluemix+code%3AUseOAuthAuthentication
Bing ranks it second though:
https://www.bing.com/search?q=useoauthauthentication+bluemix
If you were to search for *UseOAuthAuthentication
or *.UseOAuthAuthentication
, it shows up, but this seems counter-intuitive to how people would try to use search.
I guess I won't use SO's own search for a while...
code:"searchTerm"
syntax. Notice the required quotes for thecode
syntax.*.
to the method (or just*
). In this case, it means searching for*.UseOAuthAuthentication
, which shows the answer you desire as the fourth result, when sorted by votes. Thus, the issue you are encountering is that the search engine does not consider periods to separate searchable words. If you wanted it with Bluemix, you could search for*.UseOAuthAuthentication bluemix
..
separates search terms. My first assumption would be that it both does and doesn't (i.e. that both separated and unseparated would be considered searchable words). Not separating on.
forces you to search for the entire reference, when people generally want uses of the method, not the method of a specific variable. IMO, the issue is that the search help page doesn't explicitly state that.
does not separate words, that you must search for the entire reference.