Some search terms can be written using “short”
forms, which consist of a tilde
(“~
”) followed by a single
character that identifies the term, and finally the
arguments (if any) to the term. For instance, the short
form of
is ?name
(aptitude)~n
aptitude
.
When writing a term using its short form, tilde characters
and “whitespace” -- that is, space characters,
tabs, and so on -- will break the term off and start a new
term. For instance, “~mDaniel
Burrows
” will match any package whose
maintainer field contains
“Daniel
” and whose name
contains “Burrows
”, while
“~i~napt
” matches installed
packages whose name contains apt
. To
include whitespace characters in the search expression, you
can either place a tilde in front of it (as in
Daniel~ Burrows
) or place quotation marks
around it (as in "Debian Project"
or even
Debian" "Project
). Inside a quoted
string, the backslash character (“\”) can be
used to cancel the special meaning of the quotation mark:
for instance, ~d"\"email"
will match any
package whose description contains a quotation mark followed
immediately by email
.
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Note | |
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Question marks (“ |
Table 2.3, “Quick guide to search terms” lists the short form of each search term.