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No search option in windows 7

2022.01.19 02:49




















The best way to find something in Windows 7 is to go and open the Start Menu and create the necessary search.


From here it will search your entire computer, not just a single folder, for files or even programs that match the terms you typed in the search bar. Looking for a better way to find your files? Learn about Windows search made easy. To do so, just follow these steps:. You need to be in Category view to see this. Click Next. Once that is done, you may have to check off on the list of problems once more.


The Wizard will then detect problems and fix the issues with search. If it does not solve the issue, then please keep reading. The Windows desktop search in Windows 7 will search within the content of your files by default. This means that desktop search will find if your search terms actually appear within a file on your computer.


Right-click on the Start Menu button and then select Properties. Now within the Taskbar and Start Menu Properties window you will click on the Start Menu tab and then click the button that says Customize. These will reset all options including the search feature. This will open a brand new window called Indexing Options. Then click on the File Types tab. If the file extension is not in the list, go ahead and add it at the bottom.


Then select it and choose whether you want to index just the properties or the properties and the file contents. If you know the file contains only text, make sure to select the second radio button. You can also click on Index Settings to modify some of the settings for the Search Indexer. Here you can choose to index encrypted files and other options like treating similar words with diacritics as different words.


If you are having problems with Windows search or something has become corrupted, you can rebuild the index by clicking the Rebuild button. Lastly, you can completely move the search index to another disk or partition. However, all of the different search settings for your Windows 7 computer could lead you to a situation where searching and indexing are taking a very long time, or are consuming a significant amount of resources on your machine. Luckily you can restore the default search options in Windows 7 to prevent these problematic activities and return to a state where the search feature is light and helpful, albeit less thorough.


Like many of the more helpful features involving Windows Explorer and folders on your Windows 7 computer, such as showing hidden files and folders in Windows 7 , the option that you are looking for is on the Folder and search options menu. Continue reading below to learn how you can find this menu, and where the specific button is that you need to click in order to restore your search defaults.


That includes Windows Store so you can do a search on the start menu and get the search results for Store from there, just by clicking on Store to see the search results just for the Store. If you have started a "metro" application and bring out the Charms menu that menu will be sort of customized for that particular application, meaning if you are in Windows Store and bring out the Charms menu the search button will take you straight to search in Store.


But the thing is that even though Store is the default you are just one click away from searching in any other source. To summarize the search feature in Windows 8 is really powerful and provides a unified way to search in any application and source. Reminded me that the old conext menu right click is gone in Metro - and out comes the charms "new context" menu. If you need a printer when printing from builtin metro PDF app - hit the new context charms menu as well. So - just start thinking of the charms menu as the context menu in Metro.


Thats the basic thing. Then it becomes inituitive and as with the old context menu - you can always go and explore what you can do. Only the new context "charms" context menu works cross web services so its not just "local" as the old "object-oriented" context menu If you display the Charms Bar and select Search, from within any Windows 8 App, the name of the app that will be searched is at the top of the Search bar.


There is no need to return to the Start Screen. It is true that users need a few tips to successfully use Windows 8, but once they get those tips, they can be much more productive using the charms than they ever could without them.


The breakthrough technology of universal search and sharing between apps does require a paradigm shift, but it is worth it. Someone who has been trained on Windows 8 for more than 5 minutes, and who already knows about the charms. There are 5 charms. Not that much to learn. If you like, I can list them, but I'm sure you can find the documentation somewhere ;. The charms don't serve ads, and are pretty unobtrusive. They only show up when you move your mouse to the upper right corner or the lower right corner of the screen, or if you press Windows-C, or if you have touch and you swipe in from the right.


Let me know if you see them come up any other way. I guess we'll have to agree to disagree on this issue then. The solution would be to just place a search link in the Store That link could either open the Charms bar automatically, or tell you "hey, in order to search the store it's easy That's the easy solution Going around and telling each user, "sorry A new user only has to be shown this procedure one time and the 'training' is complete.


If this was an optional component for the app developer, then it would be a can of worms for the user because some apps would not even include a search function. Very unconvincing speech. Not even a good salespitch. Who are you trying to fool? Tell it to a hundred million consumers. Train them. They are the audience for this new "paradigm". Forced change is painful.


Just ask my six year old, he throws a fit any time we replace something old with something new, and immediately proclaims just how terrible the new thing is before even trying it, sometimes before even seeing it.


Because it isn't what he is used to. It is different. Not because the change is bad. Is the new system completely intuitive? Is it easy to pick up? Yes, once you get over the fact that our old friend the Start button is no more.