Skip to content
Penn State University Libraries

Search Strategy Techniques

Contact

The Education and Behavioral Sciences Library
501 Paterno Library
University Park, PA  16802
814-865-2842

Or Your Campus Librarian

Staff Directory

Developing Effective Search Strategies - Truncation Strategies

Truncation Strategies

Using "truncation"  symbols (also called "wildcard" symbols) allows you to search multiple forms of a term--singular/plural, variable spellings, etc. The most common truncation symbols are the asterisk ( * ), the question mark ( ? ), and the dollar sign ( $ ). You should use such symbols when you are uncertain how a word is spelled, when you want to find all possible spellings or endings, or  when you want to find only certain endings. 

Without truncation or substitution, you would have to perform a separate search for each spelling and each ending.  You may not know all of the possible spellings and endings for a word. 

If you use truncation, you won't need to perform separate searches; one search will find all the results that can be found.

The chart below shows some examples of searches conducted using truncation symbols.

Examples of "Wildcard" Searches

Search Statement Results
child* children, childhood, Childreth
comput* computers, computing, computed
bee* beer, beet, Beethoven, been, bees, etc. (As this example illustrates, truncating too soon results in faulty results!)

Please note:  Truncation symbols vary from database to database. You should consult a given database's "help" system to see what symbols it uses and how they are used.

Page 5 of 7

Previous | Next | Home

This document was created by Carol Wright, Associate Librarian at Penn State's University Libraries.
Instructional design assistance provided by Ann Luck, Senior Instructional Designer for Penn State's World Campus.

Copyright © June 2001, The Pennsylvania State University.