

the search word organi*ation could give results on organisation or organization etc.the search word market* could give results on market, markets, marketing etc.Arcada Finna uses * as truncation character. Truncation is done automatically in Google searches. As different databases use different signs, always check what sign a certain database is using. It is also often possible to exchange one or more characters in the middle of a word because of different spelling variations. The most common one is * (but also ?, # or $ are sometimes used). Truncation is marked with a truncation character. In English, words are often spelled differently in British and American English (e.g. This is an important point if you are looking for information in Finnish (because of different word endings). If you do not truncate search words, part of the result may be omitted because the search engine looks for words in exactly the form they are entered into the search engine. You can leave out part of a search word, which is called truncating. As mentioned, there might be something of importance in the material that stays white in the middle This search can also be compared to circles, where the circles correspond to the amount of material around a keyword, but only what is colored is what appears on the search.


others will simply process the operators from left to right, in the order in which they appear.some will first combine terms with AND, then OR, and then NOT.When using several Boolean operators in one search query, it is important to realise that different search systems process Boolean operators differently: In Scopus you need to use AND NOT to exclude a term. In Google or Google Scholar you do not need to add the operator AND, and a minus symbol is used instead of the operator NOT. Use the Boolean operators AND, OR and NOT to combine your search terms into the appropriate search queries:

Or you may want to look for information about alternatives for solar energy, and search for energy without solar. For your project on solar energy you may want to search for documents containing both the words energy and solar.
