Provided by: notmuch_0.35-2ubuntu1_amd64 bug

NAME

       notmuch-search-terms - syntax for notmuch queries

SYNOPSIS

       notmuch count [option ...] <search-term> ...

       notmuch dump [--gzip] [--format=(batch-tag|sup)] [--output=<file>] [--] [<search-term> ...]

       notmuch reindex [option ...] <search-term> ...

       notmuch search [option ...] <search-term> ...

       notmuch show [option ...] <search-term> ...

       notmuch tag +<tag> ... -<tag> [--] <search-term> ...

DESCRIPTION

       Several notmuch commands accept a common syntax for search terms.

       The  search  terms  can consist of free-form text (and quoted phrases) which will match all messages that
       contain all of the given terms/phrases in the body, the subject,  or  any  of  the  sender  or  recipient
       headers.

       As a special case, a search string consisting of exactly a single asterisk ("*") will match all messages.

   Search prefixes
       In  addition  to  free  text, the following prefixes can be used to force terms to match against specific
       portions of an email, (where <brackets> indicate user-supplied values).

       Some of the prefixes with <regex> forms can be also used to restrict the results  to  those  whose  value
       matches a regular expression (see regex(7)) delimited with //, for example:

          notmuch search 'from:"/bob@.*[.]example[.]com/"'

       body:<word-or-quoted-phrase>
              Match terms in the body of messages.

       from:<name-or-address> or from:/<regex>/
              The from: prefix is used to match the name or address of the sender of an email message.

       to:<name-or-address>
              The  to:  prefix  is  used  to  match the names or addresses of any recipient of an email message,
              (whether To, Cc, or Bcc).

       subject:<word-or-quoted-phrase> or subject:/<regex>/
              Any term prefixed with subject: will match only text from the subject of an email. Searching for a
              phrase in the subject is supported by including quotation marks  around  the  phrase,  immediately
              following subject:.

       attachment:<word>
              The attachment: prefix can be used to search for specific filenames (or extensions) of attachments
              to email messages.

       mimetype:<word>
              The  mimetype: prefix will be used to match text from the content-types of MIME parts within email
              messages (as specified by the sender).

       tag:<tag> or tag:/<regex>/ or is:<tag> or is:/<regex>/
              For tag: and is: valid tag values include inbox and unread by default for new  messages  added  by
              notmuch-new(1) as well as any other tag values added manually with notmuch-tag(1).

       id:<message-id> or mid:<message-id> or mid:/<regex>/
              For  id:  and  mid:, message ID values are the literal contents of the Message-ID: header of email
              messages, but without the '<', '>' delimiters.

       thread:<thread-id>
              The thread: prefix can be used with the thread ID values that are generated internally by  notmuch
              (and  do  not appear in email messages). These thread ID values can be seen in the first column of
              output from notmuch-search(1)

       thread:{<notmuch query>}
              Threads may be searched for indirectly by providing an arbitrary notmuch query in {}. For example,
              the following returns threads containing a message from mallory and one (not necessarily the  same
              message) with Subject containing the word "crypto".

                 % notmuch search 'thread:"{from:mallory}" and thread:"{subject:crypto}"'

              The  performance of such queries can vary wildly. To understand this, the user should think of the
              query thread:{<something>} as expanding to all of the thread IDs which match <something>;  notmuch
              then performs a second search using the expanded query.

       path:<directory-path> or path:<directory-path>/** or path:/<regex>/
              The  path:  prefix  searches for email messages that are in particular directories within the mail
              store. The directory must be specified relative to the top-level maildir (and without the  leading
              slash).  By  default, path: matches messages in the specified directory only. The "/**" suffix can
              be used to match messages in the specified  directory  and  all  its  subdirectories  recursively.
              path:""  matches  messages  in  the  root  of  the  mail  store and, likewise, path:** matches all
              messages.

              path: will find a message if any copy of that message is in the specific directory.

       folder:<maildir-folder> or folder:/<regex>/
              The folder: prefix searches for email messages by maildir or MH folder. For MH-style folders, this
              is equivalent to path:. For maildir, this includes messages in the "new" and "cur" subdirectories.
              The exact syntax for maildir folders depends on your mail configuration. For maildir++,  folder:""
              matches  the  inbox  folder (which is the root in maildir++), other folder names always start with
              ".", and nested folders are separated by "."s, such as folder:.classes.topology. For "file system"
              maildir, the inbox is typically folder:INBOX and nested folders are separated by slashes, such  as
              folder:classes/topology.

              folder: will find a message if any copy of that message is in the specific folder.

       date:<since>..<until> or date:<date>
              The  date:  prefix  can  be used to restrict the results to only messages within a particular time
              range (based on the Date: header).

              See DATE AND TIME SEARCH below for details on the  range  expression,  and  supported  syntax  for
              <since> and <until> date and time expressions.

              The  time  range  can also be specified using timestamps without including the date prefix using a
              syntax of:

              <initial-timestamp>..<final-timestamp>

              Each timestamp is a number representing the number  of  seconds  since  1970-01-01  00:00:00  UTC.
              Specifying a time range this way is considered legacy and predates the date prefix.

       lastmod:<initial-revision>..<final-revision>
              The  lastmod:  prefix  can  be used to restrict the result by the database revision number of when
              messages were last modified (tags were added/removed or filenames changed). This is  usually  used
              in  conjunction  with  the --uuid argument to notmuch-search(1) to find messages that have changed
              since an earlier query.

       query:<name>
              The  query:  prefix  allows  queries  to  refer   to   previously   saved   queries   added   with
              notmuch-config(1).

       property:<key>=<value>
              The  property:  prefix  searches  for  messages  with  a  particular  <key>=<value> property pair.
              Properties are used internally by notmuch (and extensions) to add metadata to  messages.  A  given
              key  can  be  present on a given message with several different values.  See notmuch-properties(7)
              for more details.

       User defined prefixes are also supported, see notmuch-config(1) for details.

   Operators
       In addition to individual terms, multiple terms can be combined with Boolean operators (and, or, not, and
       xor). Each term in the query will be implicitly connected by a logical AND if  no  explicit  operator  is
       provided  (except  that  terms  with a common prefix will be implicitly combined with OR).  The shorthand
       '-<term>' can be used for 'not <term>'  but  unfortunately  this  does  not  work  at  the  start  of  an
       expression.   Parentheses  can also be used to control the combination of the Boolean operators, but will
       have to be protected from interpretation by the shell, (such as by putting  quotation  marks  around  any
       parenthesized expression).

       In  addition  to  the  standard  boolean  operators,  Xapian  provides several operators specific to text
       searching.

          notmuch search term1 NEAR term2

       will return results where term1 is within 10 words of term2. The threshold can be set like this:

          notmuch search term1 NEAR/2 term2

       The search

          notmuch search term1 ADJ term2

       will return results where term1 is within 10 words of term2, but in the same order as in the  query.  The
       threshold can be set the same as with NEAR:

          notmuch search term1 ADJ/7 term2

   Stemming
       Stemming in notmuch means that these searches

          notmuch search detailed
          notmuch search details
          notmuch search detail

       will  all  return  identical  results,  because  Xapian first "reduces" the term to the common stem (here
       'detail') and then performs the search.

       There are two ways to turn this off: a search for a capitalized word will be performed unstemmed, so that
       one can search for "John" and not get results for "Johnson"; phrase  searches  are  also  unstemmed  (see
       below  for  details).   Stemming  is  currently  only  supported for English. Searches for words in other
       languages will be performed unstemmed.

   Wildcards
       It is possible to use a trailing '*' as  a  wildcard.  A  search  for  'wildc*'  will  match  'wildcard',
       'wildcat', etc.

   Boolean and Probabilistic Prefixes
       Xapian  (and  hence  notmuch)  prefixes  are either boolean, supporting exact matches like "tag:inbox" or
       probabilistic, supporting a more flexible term based searching. Certain special prefixes are processed by
       notmuch in a way not strictly fitting  either  of  Xapian's  built  in  styles.  The  prefixes  currently
       supported by notmuch are as follows.

       Boolean
              tag:, id:, thread:, folder:, path:, property:

       Probabilistic
              body:, to:, attachment:, mimetype:

       Special
              from:, query:, subject:

   Terms and phrases
       In  general  Xapian  distinguishes  between  lists  of terms and phrases. Phrases are indicated by double
       quotes (but beware you probably need to protect those from your shell) and insist  that  those  unstemmed
       words  occur  in  that  order.  One  useful,  but  initially surprising feature is that the following are
       equivalent ways to write the same phrase.

       • "a list of words"

       • a-list-of-words

       • a/list/of/words

       • a.list.of.words

       Both parenthesised lists of terms and quoted phrases are ok with  probabilistic  prefixes  such  as  to:,
       from:, and subject:. In particular

          subject:(pizza free)

       is equivalent to

          subject:pizza and subject:free

       Both of these will match a subject "Free Delicious Pizza" while

          subject:"pizza free"

       will not.

   Quoting
       Double quotes are also used by the notmuch query parser to protect boolean terms, regular expressions, or
       subqueries containing spaces or other special characters, e.g.

          tag:"a tag"

          folder:"/^.*/(Junk|Spam)$/"

          thread:"{from:mallory and date:2009}"

       As with phrases, you need to protect the double quotes from the shell e.g.

          % notmuch search 'folder:"/^.*/(Junk|Spam)$/"'
          % notmuch search 'thread:"{from:mallory and date:2009}" and thread:{to:mallory}'

DATE AND TIME SEARCH

       notmuch  understands  a  variety  of  standard  and  natural  ways of expressing dates and times, both in
       absolute terms ("2012-10-24") and in relative terms ("yesterday"). Any number of relative  terms  can  be
       combined  ("1  hour 25 minutes") and an absolute date/time can be combined with relative terms to further
       adjust it. A non-exhaustive description of the syntax supported for absolute and relative terms is  given
       below.

   The range expression
       date:<since>..<until>

       The  above  expression restricts the results to only messages from <since> to <until>, based on the Date:
       header.

       <since> and <until> can describe imprecise times, such as "yesterday".  In this case, <since> is taken as
       the earliest time it could describe (the beginning of yesterday) and <until> is taken as the latest  time
       it could describe (the end of yesterday). Similarly, date:january..february matches from the beginning of
       January to the end of February.

       If  specifying  a time range using timestamps in conjunction with the date prefix, each timestamp must be
       preceded by @ (ASCII hex 40). As above, each timestamp is a number representing  the  number  of  seconds
       since 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC. For example:
          date:@<initial-timestamp>..@<final-timestamp>

       Currently,  spaces  in  range  expressions are not supported. You can replace the spaces with '_', or (in
       most cases) '-', or (in some cases) leave the spaces out altogether. Examples in this man page use spaces
       for clarity.

       Open-ended ranges are supported. I.e. it's possible to specify date:..<until> or  date:<since>..  to  not
       limit the start or end time, respectively.

   Single expression
       date:<expr>  works  as  a  shorthand  for date:<expr>..<expr>.  For example, date:monday matches from the
       beginning of Monday until the end of Monday.

   Relative date and time
       [N|number] (years|months|weeks|days|hours|hrs|minutes|mins|seconds|secs) [...]

       All refer to past, can be repeated and will be accumulated.

       Units can be abbreviated to any length, with the otherwise ambiguous single m being m for minutes  and  M
       for months.

       Number  can  also  be  written  out  one,  two,  ..., ten, dozen, hundred.  Additionally, the unit may be
       preceded by "last" or "this" (e.g., "last week" or "this month").

       When combined with absolute date and time, the relative date and time specification will be relative from
       the specified absolute date and time.

       Examples: 5M2d, two weeks

   Supported absolute time formats
       • H[H]:MM[:SS] [(am|a.m.|pm|p.m.)]

       • H[H] (am|a.m.|pm|p.m.)

       • HHMMSS

       • now

       • noon

       • midnight

       • Examples: 17:05, 5pm

   Supported absolute date formats
       • YYYY-MM[-DD]

       • DD-MM[-[YY]YY]

       • MM-YYYY

       • M[M]/D[D][/[YY]YY]

       • M[M]/YYYY

       • D[D].M[M][.[YY]YY]

       • D[D][(st|nd|rd|th)] Mon[thname] [YYYY]

       • Mon[thname] D[D][(st|nd|rd|th)] [YYYY]

       • Wee[kday]

       Month names can be abbreviated at three or more characters.

       Weekday names can be abbreviated at three or more characters.

       Examples: 2012-07-31, 31-07-2012, 7/31/2012, August 3

   Time zones
       • (+|-)HH:MM

       • (+|-)HH[MM]

       Some time zone codes, e.g. UTC, EET.

SEE ALSO

       notmuch(1), notmuch-config(1), notmuch-count(1),  notmuch-dump(1),  notmuch-hooks(5),  notmuch-insert(1),
       notmuch-new(1),    notmuch-properties(7),   notmuch-reindex(1),   notmuch-reply(1),   notmuch-restore(1),
       notmuch-search(1), notmuch-show(1), notmuch-tag(1)

AUTHOR

       Carl Worth and many others

COPYRIGHT

       2009-2022, Carl Worth and many others

0.35                                              Mar 29, 2022                           NOTMUCH-SEARCH-TERMS(7)