When Gmail debuted 12 years ago it made a shift in how we thought about email. At a time when the norm was Hotmail's 2MB free storage,real celeb sex videos or using an ISP email address you were likely to lose at some point, the days of having to tightly manage your email storage are long gone.
Instead of deleting, the idea of archiving messages indefinitely became plausible. This has been helped by a clean interface to keep a tidy inbox and powerful search capabilities, so you can find and retrieve old emails at will. Gmail search is also speedy which makes it practical, even if you don't keep your inbox at all organized.
For sake of brevity, I'll cover a few of my favorite and most useful Gmail search operators and then give you the full list below with some examples.
If you don't want to remember any operators, clicking on the search box down arrow will bring up a dialog with useful ways to search, covering typical queries using labels, date, recipients, and so on.
On the opposite of the spectrum, those who love keyboard shortcuts will certainly want to enter operators by hand. So make sure you have Gmail keyboard shortcuts turned on (Shift + ' / 'shows the full list) and simply hitting ' / ' (forward slash) will bring focus on the search box.
Similar to searching on Google, if you wrap your query around with quotes, it will make a literal search. So you can look up an exact string like"a new hope". Conversely, adding a minus sign before a certain term or email address, will remove those from your results. For example, "star wars" -battlefront.
Run a standard search while adding who you sent or received an email from. This will narrow search results considerably, effectively filtering results in a breeze. If it's someone in your address book, Gmail will help matters further by autocompleting names which is handy.
Similarly, with subject: you can ignore emails' content and search text in the subject line only.
If you're looking for a specific email about your "pineapple" project that had an attachment added to it, you can add "has:attachment" and you'll only get results with emails that have your query term and attachments.
Or if you are looking for a particular file you can search by filename. The filename:operator also works to look up file types/extensions, so you can use "pineapple filename:pdf"and it will narrow things down for you.
If you're running out of space (Gmail offers ~15GB of free storage these days), looking up old emails that are larger than say, 10mb larger:10mwill help you finding those pesky emails with huge attachments you may no longer need, saving precious free inbox space in the process.
If you use Gmail's star system to mark important messages, this will help narrowing things down considerably. Or if you use Google Chat, searching only within chats, can be a lifesaver, For example: "is:chat Melissa".
Although a tad cumbersome to use versus picking a date from the search drop down menu. For very specific queries you can use the yyyy/mm/dd format, to search within a certain time frame.
For example, "after:2017/01/01 invoice"or "after:2012/01/01 before:2016/01/01"
For relative time queries, you can also use older_than:and newer_than:(also available from the drop down search dialog).
Gmail search ignores Trash and Spam folders by default, this operator overrides it and searches everywhere.
Although I rarely use these, they surely come handy for advanced queries.
Brackets () let you group terms. For example, "subject:(star wars)"will look for the complete term in the subject line only, while trying to do the same without brackets "subject:star wars" would only look for the word 'star' in the subject and 'wars' everywhere else.
The OR operator (must be uppercase) works a little bit like programming. So you can match multiple terms. For example, a search for two different senders: "from:paul OR from:chris"
There are a few more search operators that we haven't covered here on purpose, since the above will cover 98% of your needs.
On the 3rd week of every month, we will publish 5 tech tips, one for each day of the week (Monday-Friday) about a given app, service, or platform.
This week it's about uncovering great Gmail usability tips and tricks.
14 times J.K. Rowling absolutely annihilated Donald Trump on TwitterSee two new skins from the 'Overwatch' Chinese New Year eventNew songs Toby Keith and 3 Doors Down wrote specifically for the inaugurationLG will likely launch its G6 flagship on Feb. 26Man and his shark best friend are quite the underwater power coupleThere's a serious danger to the soft climate denial pedaled by Trump's cabinet picksBless these feminist 'Young Pope' tweets'Split' review: M. Night Shyamalan's new film is a tense, entertaining messCricketer who fought cancer dazzles after 6 years in the best innings of his lifeJ.K. Rowling shuts down Trump's inauguration with HorcruxOla thinks it has the perfect trick to compete in Uber's fastest growing marketWhy more and more singles in China are renting partnersUber will pay $20 million to settle charges that it misled drivers about payThis man wants to make dating great again for Trump supportersCBS tried to censor The Rock at the People's Choice Awards and failed miserably'League of Legends' is heading to the Big Ten Network as a college esportMeet the guy who pranked Infowars into publishing fake Trump newsChrissy Teigen once again uses stretch marks to remind us that she's normalInauguration protestor sums up mood of many with one devastating signRussians generously mint a $10,000 'Trump coin' in honor of his inauguration White House announces new AI initiatives at Global Summit on AI Safety Don't Fear the Robots: Fear Yourselves. In Memoriam: William Christenberry’s South Elon Musk is apparently obsessed with Nathan Fielder and the 'Rick and Morty' guys TikTokkers say their friends aren't texting back. Why? Anthony Madrid on Jonathan Swift Foreign Body: Paintings by Hurvin Anderson Zonies, Part 1: Flora Now Online: Our Interviews with Dag Solstad, Jay McInerney Our Winter Issue: Claudia Rankine, Albert Murray, and More A Comics Adaptation of Sigizmund Krzhizhanovsky TikTok users put their partners to 'The Beckham Test' inspired by David and Victoria From the Archive: Who’s This “Borges” Guy, Anyway? Talking to My Mom About China’s Cultural Revolution The Changing Meaning of “Self Poor Richard: Philip Guston’s Nixon Drawings Transcend Their Subject At Least We Still Have Isabelle Huppert The AI Seinfeld show loop broke but it's still alive In Which Alberto Giacometti Scopes Out Some French Cars M3 MacBook Pro vs. M2 MacBook Pro
2.0776s , 10519.1875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【real celeb sex videos】,Miracle Information Network