And how does this proposal intersect with mine? In my opinion, this is a description of completely different parts of the process and reference.Since the dot is included now in the descriptions by Ghisler, it no longer suggests to apply to all search modes.
Have you walked at my steps in checking? Got the same results? And can you understand them?
And how does this coincide with my test?Without the dot, TC looks whether the text is present anywhere in the name, while with the dot it splits the search string into tokens and then tries to match them
If the phrase | FILE"NAME.EXT | divided into such components: | NAME | + | EXT | and discarded everything up to the symbol |"|,
then why did the result of the search with the names containing ONLY the sum of these components?
And not just these components in parts.
Those. In fact, these objects should have been found:
D:\--only files--\name
D:\--only files--\name.ext
[D:\==only folders==\name]
[D:\==only folders==\name.ext]
And if you know HOW the processing logic will suddenly change - then you can create a dialog to transition from the incorrectbecause there are millions of saved searches, where some of them would be broken by such a change.
saved search patterns to the new, refined ones. Where you just specify what you need to delete/add/replace, if such actions
are needed. And no one will get an unexpected "gift" - everything will be done in plain sight.