Power Search (Library Manager)
Use Power SearchIf you have tried a Basic search and received too many results, or results that were not what you are looking for, the Power search can help. For your Power search to be successful, you need to choose the right field and enter a search term. If you use more than one word in your search term, you can also determine how Destiny searches for them. Do you want results that contain all of the words, any of them, the exact phrase, or anything starting with those words? If you enter more than one search term, you need to select the right Boolean operator (AND, OR, NOT). In addition, you can limit or expand your search by selecting any of the limiters beneath the three search fields.
Note: Limiting a search by a reading program affects only the Titles sub-tab of your search results.
When you are ready, click Search. To clear everything and start over, click Clear. To understand how the phrases in the lists work, review the following examples. The examples all use Title from the drop-down on the left. The rules are the same, though, whether you select Keyword, Title, Author, Subject, Series or Note. Use 'All these words'If you choose this from the third drop-down, Destiny returns only items with all of the words you enter; it actually places the word AND between the words.
Example A title search for secrets potter returns only items that have both secrets and potter in the title, in any order. Results would include Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets but not any other Harry Potter books or books like Secrets of animal behavior. If there are words that you know are not in the title, author, subject or series, put NOT (and a space) in front of each unwanted word.
Example You are trying to find a Goosebumps book with night in the title, but you do not want one of the three Night of the living dummy books.
Use 'Any of these words'If you choose this from the drop-down, Destiny returns items with any of the words you enter; it actually places the word OR between your search words. If you get too many results, delete one or more of the words or use more fields to narrow your search. Example You are trying to find a Goosebumps book with night in the title, but you are not sure if it is night, nightmare or midnight.
Use 'Starts with'If you choose this from the drop-down, Destiny returns only items that begin with the words you enter.
Example A Title Starts with search for red would return The Red Pony but not The Hunt for Red October. Keep in mind that Destiny ignores certain words, called stop words in the All these words, Any of these words, or This exact phrase searches.
Example If you enter on the road, Destiny usually ignores on and the and only searches for road. The search results would include The road not taken and The Golden road but not On the road. If you select Starts with, however, Destiny does not ignore any of the stop words. Destiny would look for on the road and the search results would contain the book, On the road. Use 'This exact phrase'If you choose this from the drop-down, Destiny returns only items that contain these words in this order. Example If you search for dead house, Destiny returns Welcome to Dead House, but not The house of the dead or The house on Mango Street or Tick tock, you are dead. Note: You cannot use wildcards in a This exact phrase search term. Stop wordsThese words are so common that searching on them is not productive. To save time, Destiny disregards them when they are used in all searches except Starts with searches. You can leave them out of your search term. Destiny provides the following stop words. Your list may be different. a, an, and, are, as, at be, but, by for if, in, into, is, it no, not of, on, or such that, the, their, then, there, these, they, this, to was, will, with Case sensitivityYou can use either case.
WildcardsIf you do not know the complete word, or are not sure how to spell it, add an asterisk (*) to the end of what you do know. An asterisk can replace any number of letters at the end of a word. However, the * cannot be used as a word's first or second letter or have any letters after it. You can use a question mark (?) to replace a single letter. You can use more than one question mark in a word, but it cannot be the first or last letter. Note that you cannot use wildcards in a This exact phrase search term. PunctuationYou can leave out the punctuation. Destiny ignores the punctuation in a search term. If your search term includes words separated by a punctuation mark such as a dash, double-dash, hyphen, or slash, leave it out. When you leave it out, do not replace the punctuation mark with a space.
Limit your search for titles...You can limit your search for titles by doing any or all of the following:
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Destiny v16.5 Help includes the most recent product updates. For details, see What's New in Destiny Version 16.5.