Quick guide to searching in Confluence:

  1. Use the search box at the top right of your Confluence screen. It offers you a quick navigation aid as well as a full site search.
  2. You can search Confluence directly from your browser's search box. Just add your Confluence site as a search provider using the dropdown menu in your browser's search box.
  3.  While editing a page or a blog post, you can find and replace text on the page. See Using the Editor.

Using the Quick Navigation Aid

The quick navigation aid automatically offers a dropdown list of pages and other items, matched by title to your search query. You can select one of the offered items or ignore them altogether.

To use the quick navigation aid:

  1. Start typing your query into the search box located at the top right-hand corner of every screen. Confluence matches titles as you type, showing a quickly-adjusting dropdown list of pages, blog posts, personal profiles, attachments and so on.
    (info) Press the Enter key if you want to bypass the quick navigation aid and perform a full search, as described below.
  2. To see the space to which an item belongs, let your mouse pointer hover over the item in the dropdown list.
  3. Use the up- and down-arrows on your keyboard to move up and down the list of matching titles and select an item.
  4. Press the Enter key to open the selected item.
  5. If you do not find what you are looking for, click Search for at the bottom of the list to do a full search. This has the same effect as pressing Enter immediately after typing your search query. The full search is described below.

Screenshot: The quick navigation aid showing titles matching the query 'sta'

 

Here is more information about how the quick navigation feature works:

  • Confluence will truncate any titles that are too long to be displayed.
  • The matching items are grouped by content type so that you can quickly find the type you want. Confluence shows a maximum of 6 pages and/or blog posts, 2 attachments, 3 people and 2 spaces. If no matches are found in a particular category, then that category does not appear in the list.
  • Items are ordered with the most recent updates first.
  • When the matching item is a person's name, their profile picture appears next to their name in the list.
  • The part of the title that is matched by the search query is highlighted in bold text.
  • Your Confluence Administrator can enable or disable the quick navigation feature using the Confluence Administration Console.

On this page:

関連ページ

Performing a Full Search

When you perform a full search, Confluence will search all content in all spaces (site and personal), mail, personal profiles, attachments and the space description. The results will appear on a new screen.

全検索を実行するには:

  1. Type your query into the search box located at the top right-hand corner of every screen (or type it into the text box at the top of the Search screen).
  2. Press the Enter key. (This means that you will ignore the dropdown list of titles offered by Confluence's quick navigation aid, described above.)
  3. The Search screen appears, as shown below. If any Confluence pages or items match your search query, the Search screen shows a list of the matching items.
  4. Click an item's title to open the Confluence page or other item.

Screenshot: Results of searching for 'permissions'


On the left of the screen you will see a text block for each item that matched the search criteria, with the following information for each item:

You will see only search results which you have permission to view.

On the right of the screen are further options which allow you to tailor or filter your search results. See below.

Viewing Attached Office Documents

When the search results include an attached Office document, you will see a View link as shown in the screen snippet below.

Screenshot: Search results include an attached Office document with 'View' link


Click the View link to view the content of the Office document within Confluence. If you have an Office application installed, you will also be able to launch your Office editor from within Confluence. See Displaying Office Files in Confluence and Working with the Office Connector.

Accepting 'Did you mean' Suggestions from Confluence

When you perform a full Confluence search, as described above, Confluence may offer you an alternative spelling of your search query. The alternative spelling will appear next to the words 'Did you mean', as shown in the example below.

To accept an alternative spelling suggestion:

  1. Type your query into the search box.
  2. Press the Enter key.
  3. Confluence will analyse the wiki content, to determine whether an alternative spelling of your search query occurs more often in the wiki content. If this is the case, the words 'Did you mean' will appear on the screen, along with an alternative spelling for your search query.
  4. If you want to try the alternative spelling, click the word showing the suggested spelling. In the example below, you would click confluence.

Screenshot: The Search screen with 'Did you mean' offering a corrected spelling


Here is more information about how the 'Did you mean' feature works:

Filtering your Search Results

The Search screen, pictured above, appears when you do your first search. By default, Confluence will search all content across your Confluence site, including all spaces, mail archives, attachments and all other content types.

On the right of the screen are options which allow you to tailor or filter the search results.

Enter your filter criteria as described below, then click Filter.

More information about the user-matching filter:

Click Clear Filter if you want to remove all your filters and perform the same search again but without the filter.

Using Labels in the Search

Searching for Labels

Browsing Related Labels

On the right of the search screen, Confluence offers a list of labels which are related to your search query. See the screenshot above. You can click a label to see all pages and blog posts tagged with that label. See Viewing Labels and Labelled Content.

添付ファイルのコンテンツの検索

Confluence を検索する際、既定値では検索には以下の種類の添付ファイルが含まれます。

To search the content of other attachment types, you will need to use an attachment content extractor plugin. () For more information, take a look at the following:

Search Options When Using the Documentation Theme

For screenshots and a full description, see Using the Documentation Theme.

Advanced Search Syntax

See Confluence Search Syntax for more ways to refine the text you enter into the search box.

Additionally, see Confluence Search Fields for special parameters you can use in the search box to search on various metadata.

Searching Confluence from your Browser's Search Box

If you are using Firefox or Internet Explorer 7 or later, you can add add your Confluence site as a search provider, using the dropdown menu next to the browser's search box.

The example below shows the 'Extranet' Confluence site offered for inclusion as a search engine in the browser's search box.

Screenshot: Adding your Confluence site to your browser's search box

OpenSearch 関する情報:

Useful plugins ()

This plugin extends the Confluence search, so that you can search for macro parameter names and values: the Confluence Macro Indexer plugin.