![]() ![]() ![]() Updated:day-2 will return notes that have been updated in the last two days. If a note hasn't been updated since the date it was created, the 'updated' date will be the same as the 'created' date. Searches for notes updated on or after the date specified. Note that the date specified must be formatted like this: YYYYMMDD (where YYYY is the 4-digit year, MM is the 2-digit month, and DD is the 2-digit day), or as a date relative to the current date (e.g., day-1 to represent yesterday, week-2 to represent two weeks ago, etc.)Ĭreated:day-2 will return notes that were created in the last two days.Ĭreated:20151218 will return notes created on or after December 18, 2015. Searches for notes created on or after the date specified. Note: Use -tag:* to return all notes without tags. tag:medical will return notes that do not have the tag "medical". Searches for notes not tagged with the specified tag. Note: Use tag:* to return all notes with tags. ![]() Tag:medical will return notes that have the tag "medical". Searches for notes tagged with the specified tag. Without this operator, Evernote search will return only those notes that match all of the specified search terms.Īny: pizza beer will return all notes containing either "pizza" or "beer" (removing this operator would return only notes containing "pizza" and "beer"). Searches for notes that match any of the search terms listed. Stack:Contracts will only search for notes within the 'Contracts' notebook stack. Searches for notes stored in the specified notebook stack. Notebook:Finance will only search for notes within the 'Finance' notebook. Searches for notes stored in the specified notebook. Intitle:coffee searches for notes whose title contains "coffee". For example, brav* returns results containing brave, bravo, bravado, etc. An asterisk at the end of a word returns results with a minimum of those letters.For example, "brave new world" returns only results with those 3 words in that exact sequence. Quotation marks return results with an exact match.For example, world new brave returns results with all 3 words anywhere in it. Multiple words return only results containing all the words.For example, Brave and brave return the same results. Here's a table of the most common search operators and examples of how to use them. Advanced search syntax gives you the ability to search your notes by special commands, like the date they were created, the type of content they contain (audio, images, etc.)-even where they are stored. ![]()
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