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Find any note quickly with Noteverse’s powerful search features. Search across titles, content, and metadata to locate exactly what you need. Open the search interface from multiple locations:
  • In-note search: Click the search icon in the top-right corner of any open note
  • Global search: Use the search bar from your dashboard or notes list
  • Keyboard shortcut: Press the search shortcut (if available) to open search from anywhere
Keep the search panel handy when reviewing long notes. You can search within the current note without leaving your editing view.
Search across all your note content:
1

Open search

Click the search icon or access the search bar from your dashboard.
2

Enter search terms

Type your search query in the search field. Search begins as you type, showing real-time results.
3

Review results

Search results appear instantly, showing matching notes with context snippets highlighting where your search terms appear.
4

Open a result

Click any result to open that note and jump to the relevant section.

What gets searched

Full-text search looks through:
  • Note titles: Your search terms match against note titles
  • Note content: All text content within notes is searchable
  • Tags: Search finds notes with matching tags
  • Categories: Match notes by category or subcategory names
Search only returns notes you have access to. This includes notes you own, notes shared with you, and public notes.

Search syntax

Use special syntax for more precise searches:
  • Single word: meeting - Finds all notes containing “meeting”
  • Multiple words: project status update - Finds notes containing all these words
  • Partial matches: Search matches partial words automatically

Advanced operators

Use search operators for precise results:
  • Exact phrases: "project status" - Finds notes with this exact phrase
  • Exclude terms: meeting -cancelled - Finds notes with “meeting” but not “cancelled”
  • OR searches: budget OR financial - Finds notes with either term
Search is case-insensitive. Searching for “Meeting”, “meeting”, or “MEETING” returns the same results.
When searching within a specific note:
  1. Open the note you want to search
  2. Click the search icon in the top toolbar
  3. Enter your search term
  4. Matching text is highlighted throughout the note
  5. Navigate between matches with next/previous buttons
In-note search is perfect for finding specific information in long documents without scrolling through everything.

Filtering results

Narrow down search results with filters:

Filter by ownership

  • My notes: Show only notes you created
  • Shared with me: Show only notes others have shared with you
  • Public notes: Show only public notes

Filter by category

  1. Apply a category filter to your search results
  2. Choose a specific category or subcategory
  3. Results update to show only matches within that category

Filter by tags

  1. Add tag filters to your search
  2. Select one or more tags
  3. Results show notes matching your search terms AND the selected tags

Filter by date

Refine results based on time:
  • Created date: Find notes created within a date range
  • Modified date: Find recently updated notes matching your search
  • Date shortcuts: Use options like “Last 7 days” or “Last month”
Combine multiple filters for very specific searches. For example, search for “proposal” in the “Work” category with the “client-name” tag from the last 30 days.

Accessing search history

Review and reuse your previous searches:

Viewing search history

  1. Open the search interface
  2. Click into the search field
  3. Your recent searches appear as suggestions
  4. Click any previous search to run it again

Benefits of search history

  • Quick access: Repeat common searches with one click
  • Search patterns: See what you search for most often
  • Time-saving: No need to retype frequent queries
  • Consistent results: Reuse exact search terms for consistent filtering
If you find yourself repeating the same search frequently, consider organizing those notes with a specific tag or category for even faster access.

Search results

Understand your search results:

Result information

Each search result shows:
  • Note title: The full title of the matching note
  • Context snippet: A preview of where your search terms appear
  • Highlighted terms: Your search terms are highlighted in the snippet
  • Metadata: Category, tags, and last modified date
  • Owner info: Who created the note (especially useful for shared notes)

Sorting results

Sort your search results by:
  • Relevance: Best matches appear first (default)
  • Recently updated: Most recently modified notes first
  • Title: Alphabetical sorting
  • Creation date: Newest or oldest notes first
Relevance sorting considers multiple factors including where search terms appear (title vs content), frequency of terms, and how recently the note was updated.

Search tips and tricks

Finding notes faster

  • Start specific: Use specific terms rather than generic words
  • Use titles: Include distinctive words from note titles
  • Leverage tags: Search for tag names to filter by topic
  • Try variations: If you don’t find what you want, try related terms

Effective search strategies

1

Start broad

Begin with a general search term to see all related notes.
2

Add filters

Narrow results by adding category, tag, or date filters.
3

Refine terms

Adjust your search terms based on initial results.
4

Sort results

Change sorting to find the most relevant or recent notes.

Common search scenarios

Finding a specific note you know exists:
  • Search for distinctive words from the title
  • Add the category if you remember it
  • Filter by approximate date if you recall when you created it
Gathering notes on a topic:
  • Search for the topic keyword
  • Don’t filter initially - see all related notes
  • Use tag filters to focus on specific aspects
Finding recent work:
  • Use a general term related to your recent work
  • Sort by “Recently updated”
  • Filter for “Last 7 days” or “Last month”
If search isn’t finding your note, try searching for just one distinctive word from it. Sometimes less is more in search queries.

Search scope

Understand what search can and cannot find:
  • All notes you own (any visibility level)
  • Notes shared with you (View or Edit permission)
  • All public notes
  • Full note content and metadata
  • Notes you don’t have access to
  • Private notes owned by others (unless shared with you)
  • Deleted notes
  • Comments (use comment search within notes instead)
When you share a note with someone, it becomes searchable for them immediately. When you remove their access, it disappears from their search results.

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