Home > PhoneRescue > PhoneRescue for iOS > How to Search Text Messages/iMessages on iPhone with 3 Simple Ways We send and receive messages everyday with the Messages App on the iPhone. Like many of us, you may find that it is not easy to search for a specific text among a pile of messages on your iPhone.
One of the biggest advantages of digitizing notes, if you’re a student, is that you can search for text within Word documents and find where you last saw a phrase that you now need to consolidate with your new lesson. We’ve seen how to use DocFetcherQuickly Search Documents For Words with DocFetcherQuickly Search Documents For Words with DocFetcherRead More to search within PDF files, but if you already have PDF-XChange Viewer, Foxit or even Adobe Reader, did you know you can already search for text inside PDF documents without additional programs? I didn’t know this so I thought it might be something good to share.
This might be useful too, if you own a large collection of e-books in PDF. I know I have a few copies of the free manuals that MakeUseOf distributes, plus a lot of PDFs for each of my classes so knowing my preferred PDF viewer can do this is tremendously useful.
Search Within Files For Text
PDF-XChange Viewer [Windows]
Even with its free version, PDF-XChange Viewer has pretty mind-blowing featuresPDF-XChange Viewer - Give This Free PDF Reader A Second LookPDF-XChange Viewer - Give This Free PDF Reader A Second LookRead More. I’ve been using it for quite some time and absolutely adore the fact that you can customize keyboard shortcuts for any function. However, I didn’t realize you could use it to search entire directories until after searching all over the web for a PDF document search tool. It turns out the Search feature in PDF-XChange is pretty powerful and fast. You can either go to the Edit menu > Search or go to the drop-down menu for the Find feature.
Search For Specific Text In Mail Machines
You’ll see a sidebar on the right of the open PDF file. What is really neat is that if you have several PDF documents open in tabs, you can search through all of those open files, or only the current PDF. You can also specify a directory. In the Options buttons, you can also choose to search bookmarks and comments.
In the search term box, you can also use the drop-down menu to navigate to the Advanced Search function, which you can use to exclude words, include exact phrases, etc. Once you’ve completed the search, any result you click on will open up the respective file with the search term highlighted.
Adobe Reader [Cross-Platform]
We have seen many alternatives4 Very Light Alternatives to Adobe Reader4 Very Light Alternatives to Adobe ReaderAre you still using Adobe Reader for PDF documents? It's time to move on to an alternative PDF reader that is lightweight, launches quickly, and yet keeps your documents save.Read More to Adobe Reader, including a portable version, but if you’d rather stick with Adobe’s product, you can easily use the Full Reader Search (which you can invoke by pressing Ctrl + Shift + F) from the Find function’s drop-down menu or by heading to Edit > Search.
Like PDF-XChange, you will then able to search for text inside PDF documents in your specified locations.
After the search has returned results, clicking on any of them will open up the respective PDF file with the search term highlighted on the correct page.
If you want to preview or open up the results from different PDF files though, Adobe Reader will open them in separate windows since it doesn’t support tabbed documents.
What’s very impressive though, even more so than my beloved PDF-XChange Viewer’s Advanced Search, which has plenty for very specific searches.
Foxit Reader [Windows, Linux]
Foxit Reader is extremely popular! This lightweight viewer also has the Search function in the Find drop-down menu and under the Tools menu.
Similar to PDF-XChange, you’ll also see a sidebar on the right of the open PDF file, you can specify whether to look in the current document or in a specific directory, and the functionality will be really fast.
Unlike PDF-XChange however, you aren’t offered the option to search in all currently open PDF files.
It’s worth mentioning that if you don’t have any of these readers but you’re on a Windows computer, you can actually use Windows Desktop Search (the one you get from pressing Win key + F) to look for text within PDF files with the help of the Adobe PDF iFilter for 64-bit and 32-bit systems. If you do have the latest version of Adobe Reader, it will have bundled the iFilter add-in so you can use Windows Search to index PDF file contents without any problems. PDF-XChange enthusiasts also have the option to use the iFilter add-in.
If all you’re looking for is a small utility that’s fast and can search inside files, PDF or not, check out FileHound (here’s the portable version). I haven’t tried searching within scanned PDF files, but if anyone has, please share your experience in the comments.
What do you use to search for text inside PDF files?
Photo credit: Scott Copeland
Explore more about: Digital Document, PDF, Web Search.
can any body please tell me the war to convert pdf to word if the book having maths fonts also or without maths
i have already used many software
please its urgentcan any body please tell me the war to convert pdf to word if the book having maths fonts also or without maths
i have already used many software
please its urgentSorry, but FoxIt Reader is not available for all major platforms (Mac and Windows). It's available for Windows and Linux, but that's it. You need to actually check your facts before committing them to publish, and provide direct links.
Have you ever heard of a MISTAKE buddy?!?! You need to check your manners and attitude before commenting!!
I'd say it's you who needs to check your attitude and manners. Anyone who uses all caps in their comments is obviously just throwing a temper tantrum. If you can't act like an adult, don't open your mouth.
Or you can just use PDF Stacks at http://www.pdfstacks.com
So much easier to search multiple PDF's and to do other stuff.thanks for the share!
Or you can just use PDF Stacks at http://www.pdfstacks.com
So much easier to search multiple PDF's and to do other stuff.
Search Outlook.com for emails in your Outlook Mail on the Web account in a fast and simple manner or thoroughly and with a bit of structure. Use the simple search field to find phrases, subjects, senders, and dates. Then, use filters to narrow your results. For advanced and precise searches, type Outlook.com search operators directly in the search field.
Instructions in this article apply to Outlook.com and Outlook Online.
Search Outlook.com to Find Emails Fast and Precisely
Go to the Search box. If you use Outlook keyboard shortcuts, press Alt+Q.
Type the words for which you want to search and press Enter. Or, select from the auto-complete suggestions.
- From: — Search sender names and addresses in the From line.
- To: — Search recipient names and addresses in the To line.
- Subject: — Search subject lines and display emails that contain the specified words (the word order does not matter).
- OR — Search messages with subjects that contain one word or another. For example, train OR bicycle finds messages that have 'train' or 'bicycle' in the subject.
To focus on a specific location, select Filters, then choose what location you want, if it has Attachments, or specific dates.
Add additional search words using search operators such as looking for a specific sender.
When you see the search result you want, select the message to view it.