Windows 10 Start Menu Search Indexing Fields (Filename only? Apparently not!)












6















So here's a question that I haven't been able to find the answer to anywhere:



What field(s) does Windows 10 use to index files by whenever performing a start menu search? The obvious answer would be that it's indexing by filename and filename alone, but I'm not entirely so sure. If it's not clear what I mean, observe the following example below:



As of right now, the ONLY folder that I have Windows 10 indexing on my computer is the "C:ProgramDataMicrosoftWindowsStart MenuPrograms" folder (and all of its contents). This is because I put shortcuts to all of my programs in there. But look at this:



enter image description here



Notice that the shortcut with the filename "Epic Games Launcher.lnk" showed up first, before the shortcut with the filename "Unreal Engine.lnk." Now,for those who don't know, there is a relationship between the Epic Games Launcher and Unreal Engine (the Epic Games Launcher is what you use to install Unreal Engine), but I still don't understand why it appears in the search first despite not having the word "Unreal" anywhere in its filename.



I noticed that the "description" of the "Epic Games Launcher.lnk" that can be viewed when opening up the properties says "UnrealEngineLauncher," but whenever I type "UnrealE" into the search, nothing shows up at all, so I don't assume that Windows is using this "description" field to index the shortcuts. So I have no idea what it's really doing.



Does anybody understand this, and, apart from deleting the Epic Games Launcher shortcut, does anybody know how to make Windows 10 index by filename only? Thanks.










share|improve this question























  • At a guess, perhaps it's looking at the executable path in the .lnk file.

    – Anaksunaman
    Apr 18 '18 at 5:59











  • @Anaksunaman I doubt that can be it; the path in this case is: "C:Program Files (x86)Epic GamesLauncherPortalBinariesWin32EpicGamesLauncher.exe" which does not contain the text string "unreal." Further, if I name a shortcut something completely arbitrary and then type that name into the search, it still shows up. So it must be indexing by something in addition to the filename, but whatever it is still mystifies me. I suspect it could be a property somewhere that the epic games launcher itself set whenever I installed it, but who knows where that is?

    – ereHsaWyhsipS
    Apr 18 '18 at 6:19













  • So, in general, I'm wondering what Windows is actually doing whenever you do these searches. I really want to find out!

    – ereHsaWyhsipS
    Apr 18 '18 at 6:21






  • 1





    Can you reproduce this? (Search "web browser" and get Edge & IE only)

    – guest-vm
    Apr 27 '18 at 18:30






  • 1





    @guest-vm while I agree with your overall philosophy, from my perspective, the bounty is relatively inconsequential. That's why I didn't attempt to write an answer, instead. However, I still wanted to help the OP as much as possible, and that's also why I didn't flag the post as too broad even though it contains multiple questions. The ultimate query is as follows: "Does anybody know how to make Windows 10 index by filename only?" The genuine answer should be "no," because unfortunately that isn't possible (regardless of the native Windows 10 index methods that piqued their curiosity).

    – Run5k
    Apr 28 '18 at 21:01
















6















So here's a question that I haven't been able to find the answer to anywhere:



What field(s) does Windows 10 use to index files by whenever performing a start menu search? The obvious answer would be that it's indexing by filename and filename alone, but I'm not entirely so sure. If it's not clear what I mean, observe the following example below:



As of right now, the ONLY folder that I have Windows 10 indexing on my computer is the "C:ProgramDataMicrosoftWindowsStart MenuPrograms" folder (and all of its contents). This is because I put shortcuts to all of my programs in there. But look at this:



enter image description here



Notice that the shortcut with the filename "Epic Games Launcher.lnk" showed up first, before the shortcut with the filename "Unreal Engine.lnk." Now,for those who don't know, there is a relationship between the Epic Games Launcher and Unreal Engine (the Epic Games Launcher is what you use to install Unreal Engine), but I still don't understand why it appears in the search first despite not having the word "Unreal" anywhere in its filename.



I noticed that the "description" of the "Epic Games Launcher.lnk" that can be viewed when opening up the properties says "UnrealEngineLauncher," but whenever I type "UnrealE" into the search, nothing shows up at all, so I don't assume that Windows is using this "description" field to index the shortcuts. So I have no idea what it's really doing.



Does anybody understand this, and, apart from deleting the Epic Games Launcher shortcut, does anybody know how to make Windows 10 index by filename only? Thanks.










share|improve this question























  • At a guess, perhaps it's looking at the executable path in the .lnk file.

    – Anaksunaman
    Apr 18 '18 at 5:59











  • @Anaksunaman I doubt that can be it; the path in this case is: "C:Program Files (x86)Epic GamesLauncherPortalBinariesWin32EpicGamesLauncher.exe" which does not contain the text string "unreal." Further, if I name a shortcut something completely arbitrary and then type that name into the search, it still shows up. So it must be indexing by something in addition to the filename, but whatever it is still mystifies me. I suspect it could be a property somewhere that the epic games launcher itself set whenever I installed it, but who knows where that is?

    – ereHsaWyhsipS
    Apr 18 '18 at 6:19













  • So, in general, I'm wondering what Windows is actually doing whenever you do these searches. I really want to find out!

    – ereHsaWyhsipS
    Apr 18 '18 at 6:21






  • 1





    Can you reproduce this? (Search "web browser" and get Edge & IE only)

    – guest-vm
    Apr 27 '18 at 18:30






  • 1





    @guest-vm while I agree with your overall philosophy, from my perspective, the bounty is relatively inconsequential. That's why I didn't attempt to write an answer, instead. However, I still wanted to help the OP as much as possible, and that's also why I didn't flag the post as too broad even though it contains multiple questions. The ultimate query is as follows: "Does anybody know how to make Windows 10 index by filename only?" The genuine answer should be "no," because unfortunately that isn't possible (regardless of the native Windows 10 index methods that piqued their curiosity).

    – Run5k
    Apr 28 '18 at 21:01














6












6








6








So here's a question that I haven't been able to find the answer to anywhere:



What field(s) does Windows 10 use to index files by whenever performing a start menu search? The obvious answer would be that it's indexing by filename and filename alone, but I'm not entirely so sure. If it's not clear what I mean, observe the following example below:



As of right now, the ONLY folder that I have Windows 10 indexing on my computer is the "C:ProgramDataMicrosoftWindowsStart MenuPrograms" folder (and all of its contents). This is because I put shortcuts to all of my programs in there. But look at this:



enter image description here



Notice that the shortcut with the filename "Epic Games Launcher.lnk" showed up first, before the shortcut with the filename "Unreal Engine.lnk." Now,for those who don't know, there is a relationship between the Epic Games Launcher and Unreal Engine (the Epic Games Launcher is what you use to install Unreal Engine), but I still don't understand why it appears in the search first despite not having the word "Unreal" anywhere in its filename.



I noticed that the "description" of the "Epic Games Launcher.lnk" that can be viewed when opening up the properties says "UnrealEngineLauncher," but whenever I type "UnrealE" into the search, nothing shows up at all, so I don't assume that Windows is using this "description" field to index the shortcuts. So I have no idea what it's really doing.



Does anybody understand this, and, apart from deleting the Epic Games Launcher shortcut, does anybody know how to make Windows 10 index by filename only? Thanks.










share|improve this question














So here's a question that I haven't been able to find the answer to anywhere:



What field(s) does Windows 10 use to index files by whenever performing a start menu search? The obvious answer would be that it's indexing by filename and filename alone, but I'm not entirely so sure. If it's not clear what I mean, observe the following example below:



As of right now, the ONLY folder that I have Windows 10 indexing on my computer is the "C:ProgramDataMicrosoftWindowsStart MenuPrograms" folder (and all of its contents). This is because I put shortcuts to all of my programs in there. But look at this:



enter image description here



Notice that the shortcut with the filename "Epic Games Launcher.lnk" showed up first, before the shortcut with the filename "Unreal Engine.lnk." Now,for those who don't know, there is a relationship between the Epic Games Launcher and Unreal Engine (the Epic Games Launcher is what you use to install Unreal Engine), but I still don't understand why it appears in the search first despite not having the word "Unreal" anywhere in its filename.



I noticed that the "description" of the "Epic Games Launcher.lnk" that can be viewed when opening up the properties says "UnrealEngineLauncher," but whenever I type "UnrealE" into the search, nothing shows up at all, so I don't assume that Windows is using this "description" field to index the shortcuts. So I have no idea what it's really doing.



Does anybody understand this, and, apart from deleting the Epic Games Launcher shortcut, does anybody know how to make Windows 10 index by filename only? Thanks.







windows windows-10 search shortcuts start-menu






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Apr 18 '18 at 4:12









ereHsaWyhsipSereHsaWyhsipS

18819




18819













  • At a guess, perhaps it's looking at the executable path in the .lnk file.

    – Anaksunaman
    Apr 18 '18 at 5:59











  • @Anaksunaman I doubt that can be it; the path in this case is: "C:Program Files (x86)Epic GamesLauncherPortalBinariesWin32EpicGamesLauncher.exe" which does not contain the text string "unreal." Further, if I name a shortcut something completely arbitrary and then type that name into the search, it still shows up. So it must be indexing by something in addition to the filename, but whatever it is still mystifies me. I suspect it could be a property somewhere that the epic games launcher itself set whenever I installed it, but who knows where that is?

    – ereHsaWyhsipS
    Apr 18 '18 at 6:19













  • So, in general, I'm wondering what Windows is actually doing whenever you do these searches. I really want to find out!

    – ereHsaWyhsipS
    Apr 18 '18 at 6:21






  • 1





    Can you reproduce this? (Search "web browser" and get Edge & IE only)

    – guest-vm
    Apr 27 '18 at 18:30






  • 1





    @guest-vm while I agree with your overall philosophy, from my perspective, the bounty is relatively inconsequential. That's why I didn't attempt to write an answer, instead. However, I still wanted to help the OP as much as possible, and that's also why I didn't flag the post as too broad even though it contains multiple questions. The ultimate query is as follows: "Does anybody know how to make Windows 10 index by filename only?" The genuine answer should be "no," because unfortunately that isn't possible (regardless of the native Windows 10 index methods that piqued their curiosity).

    – Run5k
    Apr 28 '18 at 21:01



















  • At a guess, perhaps it's looking at the executable path in the .lnk file.

    – Anaksunaman
    Apr 18 '18 at 5:59











  • @Anaksunaman I doubt that can be it; the path in this case is: "C:Program Files (x86)Epic GamesLauncherPortalBinariesWin32EpicGamesLauncher.exe" which does not contain the text string "unreal." Further, if I name a shortcut something completely arbitrary and then type that name into the search, it still shows up. So it must be indexing by something in addition to the filename, but whatever it is still mystifies me. I suspect it could be a property somewhere that the epic games launcher itself set whenever I installed it, but who knows where that is?

    – ereHsaWyhsipS
    Apr 18 '18 at 6:19













  • So, in general, I'm wondering what Windows is actually doing whenever you do these searches. I really want to find out!

    – ereHsaWyhsipS
    Apr 18 '18 at 6:21






  • 1





    Can you reproduce this? (Search "web browser" and get Edge & IE only)

    – guest-vm
    Apr 27 '18 at 18:30






  • 1





    @guest-vm while I agree with your overall philosophy, from my perspective, the bounty is relatively inconsequential. That's why I didn't attempt to write an answer, instead. However, I still wanted to help the OP as much as possible, and that's also why I didn't flag the post as too broad even though it contains multiple questions. The ultimate query is as follows: "Does anybody know how to make Windows 10 index by filename only?" The genuine answer should be "no," because unfortunately that isn't possible (regardless of the native Windows 10 index methods that piqued their curiosity).

    – Run5k
    Apr 28 '18 at 21:01

















At a guess, perhaps it's looking at the executable path in the .lnk file.

– Anaksunaman
Apr 18 '18 at 5:59





At a guess, perhaps it's looking at the executable path in the .lnk file.

– Anaksunaman
Apr 18 '18 at 5:59













@Anaksunaman I doubt that can be it; the path in this case is: "C:Program Files (x86)Epic GamesLauncherPortalBinariesWin32EpicGamesLauncher.exe" which does not contain the text string "unreal." Further, if I name a shortcut something completely arbitrary and then type that name into the search, it still shows up. So it must be indexing by something in addition to the filename, but whatever it is still mystifies me. I suspect it could be a property somewhere that the epic games launcher itself set whenever I installed it, but who knows where that is?

– ereHsaWyhsipS
Apr 18 '18 at 6:19







@Anaksunaman I doubt that can be it; the path in this case is: "C:Program Files (x86)Epic GamesLauncherPortalBinariesWin32EpicGamesLauncher.exe" which does not contain the text string "unreal." Further, if I name a shortcut something completely arbitrary and then type that name into the search, it still shows up. So it must be indexing by something in addition to the filename, but whatever it is still mystifies me. I suspect it could be a property somewhere that the epic games launcher itself set whenever I installed it, but who knows where that is?

– ereHsaWyhsipS
Apr 18 '18 at 6:19















So, in general, I'm wondering what Windows is actually doing whenever you do these searches. I really want to find out!

– ereHsaWyhsipS
Apr 18 '18 at 6:21





So, in general, I'm wondering what Windows is actually doing whenever you do these searches. I really want to find out!

– ereHsaWyhsipS
Apr 18 '18 at 6:21




1




1





Can you reproduce this? (Search "web browser" and get Edge & IE only)

– guest-vm
Apr 27 '18 at 18:30





Can you reproduce this? (Search "web browser" and get Edge & IE only)

– guest-vm
Apr 27 '18 at 18:30




1




1





@guest-vm while I agree with your overall philosophy, from my perspective, the bounty is relatively inconsequential. That's why I didn't attempt to write an answer, instead. However, I still wanted to help the OP as much as possible, and that's also why I didn't flag the post as too broad even though it contains multiple questions. The ultimate query is as follows: "Does anybody know how to make Windows 10 index by filename only?" The genuine answer should be "no," because unfortunately that isn't possible (regardless of the native Windows 10 index methods that piqued their curiosity).

– Run5k
Apr 28 '18 at 21:01





@guest-vm while I agree with your overall philosophy, from my perspective, the bounty is relatively inconsequential. That's why I didn't attempt to write an answer, instead. However, I still wanted to help the OP as much as possible, and that's also why I didn't flag the post as too broad even though it contains multiple questions. The ultimate query is as follows: "Does anybody know how to make Windows 10 index by filename only?" The genuine answer should be "no," because unfortunately that isn't possible (regardless of the native Windows 10 index methods that piqued their curiosity).

– Run5k
Apr 28 '18 at 21:01










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















-1














You have two parts to your question.
First, "does anybody understand this."
According to Microsoft:




"By default, all the properties of your files are indexed, including
file names and full file paths. For files with text, their contents
are indexed to allow you to search for words within the files."




Of course, this is not as specific as we might like, but it is easy to see how Unreal Engine could be associated with the Epic Games Launcher, since the indexing is this broad.

This means that the hypothesis "that Windows is using this 'description' field to index the shortcuts" is in fact correct.

Fortunately Windows does allow some control over this behavior, even if it is not as much as one might like.



That brings us to the second part of the question:
"Does anybody know how to make Windows 10 index by filename only?"



The short answer to this part of the question is "no."

Windows does allow some modification of indexing behavior, but not in great detail. On Windows 10 (and some earlier version) in your Indexing Options, in Advanced, you can change indexing behavior on a per-file-extension basis. Unfortunately, it does not allow fine-grained choices such as "only by filename." Your two choices are "index properties only" and "index properties and file contents." In your case even the more restricted "index properties only" option will include the description, because that is part of the file's properties.



There is an additional piece of information relevant to this whole discussion: why does "Epic Games Launcher" not only show up, but show up as the best as the Best Match? Briefly put, "Best Match" is a potentially misleading label. This is a result field that attempts to find what the user is most likely interested in, not some simple ranking of how closely a result matches the search term.






share|improve this answer






















    protected by Community Jan 30 at 20:44



    Thank you for your interest in this question.
    Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



    Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?














    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes








    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    -1














    You have two parts to your question.
    First, "does anybody understand this."
    According to Microsoft:




    "By default, all the properties of your files are indexed, including
    file names and full file paths. For files with text, their contents
    are indexed to allow you to search for words within the files."




    Of course, this is not as specific as we might like, but it is easy to see how Unreal Engine could be associated with the Epic Games Launcher, since the indexing is this broad.

    This means that the hypothesis "that Windows is using this 'description' field to index the shortcuts" is in fact correct.

    Fortunately Windows does allow some control over this behavior, even if it is not as much as one might like.



    That brings us to the second part of the question:
    "Does anybody know how to make Windows 10 index by filename only?"



    The short answer to this part of the question is "no."

    Windows does allow some modification of indexing behavior, but not in great detail. On Windows 10 (and some earlier version) in your Indexing Options, in Advanced, you can change indexing behavior on a per-file-extension basis. Unfortunately, it does not allow fine-grained choices such as "only by filename." Your two choices are "index properties only" and "index properties and file contents." In your case even the more restricted "index properties only" option will include the description, because that is part of the file's properties.



    There is an additional piece of information relevant to this whole discussion: why does "Epic Games Launcher" not only show up, but show up as the best as the Best Match? Briefly put, "Best Match" is a potentially misleading label. This is a result field that attempts to find what the user is most likely interested in, not some simple ranking of how closely a result matches the search term.






    share|improve this answer




























      -1














      You have two parts to your question.
      First, "does anybody understand this."
      According to Microsoft:




      "By default, all the properties of your files are indexed, including
      file names and full file paths. For files with text, their contents
      are indexed to allow you to search for words within the files."




      Of course, this is not as specific as we might like, but it is easy to see how Unreal Engine could be associated with the Epic Games Launcher, since the indexing is this broad.

      This means that the hypothesis "that Windows is using this 'description' field to index the shortcuts" is in fact correct.

      Fortunately Windows does allow some control over this behavior, even if it is not as much as one might like.



      That brings us to the second part of the question:
      "Does anybody know how to make Windows 10 index by filename only?"



      The short answer to this part of the question is "no."

      Windows does allow some modification of indexing behavior, but not in great detail. On Windows 10 (and some earlier version) in your Indexing Options, in Advanced, you can change indexing behavior on a per-file-extension basis. Unfortunately, it does not allow fine-grained choices such as "only by filename." Your two choices are "index properties only" and "index properties and file contents." In your case even the more restricted "index properties only" option will include the description, because that is part of the file's properties.



      There is an additional piece of information relevant to this whole discussion: why does "Epic Games Launcher" not only show up, but show up as the best as the Best Match? Briefly put, "Best Match" is a potentially misleading label. This is a result field that attempts to find what the user is most likely interested in, not some simple ranking of how closely a result matches the search term.






      share|improve this answer


























        -1












        -1








        -1







        You have two parts to your question.
        First, "does anybody understand this."
        According to Microsoft:




        "By default, all the properties of your files are indexed, including
        file names and full file paths. For files with text, their contents
        are indexed to allow you to search for words within the files."




        Of course, this is not as specific as we might like, but it is easy to see how Unreal Engine could be associated with the Epic Games Launcher, since the indexing is this broad.

        This means that the hypothesis "that Windows is using this 'description' field to index the shortcuts" is in fact correct.

        Fortunately Windows does allow some control over this behavior, even if it is not as much as one might like.



        That brings us to the second part of the question:
        "Does anybody know how to make Windows 10 index by filename only?"



        The short answer to this part of the question is "no."

        Windows does allow some modification of indexing behavior, but not in great detail. On Windows 10 (and some earlier version) in your Indexing Options, in Advanced, you can change indexing behavior on a per-file-extension basis. Unfortunately, it does not allow fine-grained choices such as "only by filename." Your two choices are "index properties only" and "index properties and file contents." In your case even the more restricted "index properties only" option will include the description, because that is part of the file's properties.



        There is an additional piece of information relevant to this whole discussion: why does "Epic Games Launcher" not only show up, but show up as the best as the Best Match? Briefly put, "Best Match" is a potentially misleading label. This is a result field that attempts to find what the user is most likely interested in, not some simple ranking of how closely a result matches the search term.






        share|improve this answer













        You have two parts to your question.
        First, "does anybody understand this."
        According to Microsoft:




        "By default, all the properties of your files are indexed, including
        file names and full file paths. For files with text, their contents
        are indexed to allow you to search for words within the files."




        Of course, this is not as specific as we might like, but it is easy to see how Unreal Engine could be associated with the Epic Games Launcher, since the indexing is this broad.

        This means that the hypothesis "that Windows is using this 'description' field to index the shortcuts" is in fact correct.

        Fortunately Windows does allow some control over this behavior, even if it is not as much as one might like.



        That brings us to the second part of the question:
        "Does anybody know how to make Windows 10 index by filename only?"



        The short answer to this part of the question is "no."

        Windows does allow some modification of indexing behavior, but not in great detail. On Windows 10 (and some earlier version) in your Indexing Options, in Advanced, you can change indexing behavior on a per-file-extension basis. Unfortunately, it does not allow fine-grained choices such as "only by filename." Your two choices are "index properties only" and "index properties and file contents." In your case even the more restricted "index properties only" option will include the description, because that is part of the file's properties.



        There is an additional piece of information relevant to this whole discussion: why does "Epic Games Launcher" not only show up, but show up as the best as the Best Match? Briefly put, "Best Match" is a potentially misleading label. This is a result field that attempts to find what the user is most likely interested in, not some simple ranking of how closely a result matches the search term.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Feb 21 at 16:44









        JCDJCD

        303




        303

















            protected by Community Jan 30 at 20:44



            Thank you for your interest in this question.
            Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



            Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?



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