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> There are hundreds of different file types, I doubt any single tool could
> index them all.
The last time I looked, most file types stored text content as
unmodified text.
To see this, make a copy of a Word file that has some text in it.
Then, in a DOS Window (aka, "Command Window"), execute this command:
type <your Word filename> | more
Scroll thru a few screenfuls by pressing the spacebar once to scroll
once. You should start to see the text scrolling by after the Word
header has gone past.
Do this with a copy of any file you want. If it has text in it, it is
probably viewable this way.
> No offence Ned, but I doubt your homemade indexer could either.
Heck, Gordo. It is just a matter of opening disk files and looking for
text in them. Machine indexing does not need to know what application
created the file.
>
> Or maybe the documentation says that because legal said to put it in?? ;-)
>
Now we're talking like hardworking people of business. Say hello to the
family for me :-)
All standard disclaimers etc.
Ned Bedinger
doc -at- edwordsmith -dot- com
>
> -----Original Message-----
>> "Searchable file types
>> Microsoft Windows Desktop Search indexes more than 200 of the most
>> common file types, all of which are listed below.
>>
>> However, Windows Desktop Search cannot index every type of file.
>
>
> So if my homemade indexer could do that, and it was just stock VB that I
> used to do it, I wonder what's with WDS in this regard?
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