<p class="Paragraph"><help:paragraphinfo state="U" number="2"/><help:help-text value="visible">Assigns a name to an Internet URL or file.</help:help-text> You can also enter search criteria for an Internet search site.</p>
<p class="Paragraph"><help:paragraphinfo state="U" number="7" xmlns:help="http://openoffice.org/2000/help"/>Finds all pages that contain the words "Star" AND "Office" at any position.</p>
<p class="Paragraph"><help:paragraphinfo state="U" number="9" xmlns:help="http://openoffice.org/2000/help"/>Finds all pages that contain "Star" OR "Office".</p>
<p class="Paragraph"><help:paragraphinfo state="U" number="11" xmlns:help="http://openoffice.org/2000/help"/>Finds all pages that contain the specified text. Search text without quotation marks will be sent directly to the specified search engine in the Internet. In most cases, a search engine combines a string of words with "OR," and finds pages in which at least one of the words appear.</p>
<p class="Paragraph"><help:paragraphinfo state="U" number="12" xmlns:help="http://openoffice.org/2000/help"/>Not all Internet <help:popup Id="65629" Eid="suchmaschine" xmlns:help="http://openoffice.org/2000/help">search engines</help:popup> support all logical combinations. It is recommended to use only one of the three options for linking search terms.</p>