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I Type In Something New, Then Search For It Right Away, But It Does Not Show Up |
| Moral of the story. Finish typing something before you look for it. If you type in something new...leaving your curser on the line at the end of the line you typed. Then search for it to do a quick test, it will not show up. The computer thinks you are still typing. Click on the next blank line then search. Now what you typed in new will show up. In the real world... Not many people would leave what they were typing to imediately search for that same thing. |
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--------- Here is the story in detail. Example: If you have files you call documents A, then drop down a line and type documents B leaving your curser on the last line. Then you switch to the search page... and in the search window you type documents. The documents B (which you have not left yet with your curser) does not show. , the computer thinks you are still half way through typing and does not show an incomplete document in a search. So...The "problem" is this. If you are doing a quick test...and...If you are typing on a line and stay on that line. Then switch to search and try to search for the line (you are still typing on). The line you are typing on will not show.. In the real world... Not many people would leave what they were typing to imediately search for that same thing. Find Every file automatically stores the line you type on, as soon as you are finished typing and move on to the next line...or it automatically stores the line you are typing on if you close the program. Once again the solution. Just move the curser to any other line than what you are typing on. Then do a test search. Now all the lines will now show up in a search. Or close the program while still typing on a line. Open it back up.. and everything shows. Moral of the story. Finish typing something before you look for it. |