Advanced Search

Here are a few examples of how you can use the search feature:

Entering this and that into the search form will return results containing both "this" and "that".

Entering this not that into the search form will return results containing "this" and not "that".

Entering this or that into the search form will return results containing either "this" or "that".

Search results can also be filtered using a variety of criteria. Select one or more filters below to get started.

Assuming omits is required, the following 4 results were found.

  1. Crystal Reports: Exporting to Excel omits column headershttps://www.joellipman.com/component/content/article/crystal-reports-exporting-to-excel-omits-column-headers.html?catid=110&Itemid=165

    If you've been to the point where you're exporting a report to Excel, and only some of the column headers appear, then try this: I googled this for ages and found different suggestions here and there but none of them produced consistent results. One...

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Joel Lipman
    • Category: Excel
    • Language: en-GB
  2. ZohoCRM: zoho.crm.searchRecords only returns certain recordshttps://www.joellipman.com/articles/crm/zoho/zoho-crm/zohocrm-search-records-only-returns-certain-records.html

    article to hopefully resolve for you quicker than it took me, why a zoho.crm.searchRecords() returns some of the records but omits others. Why? The use-case was that we were creating a custom related list on a Zoho Finance > Sales Orders module but it...

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Joel Lipman
    • Category: Zoho CRM
    • Language: *
  3. MySQL: Count occurrences of words in a columnhttps://www.joellipman.com/articles/else/database/mysql/mysql-count-occurrences-of-words-in-a-column.html

    GROUP BY `value` ORDER BY `total` DESC LIMIT 0,50; Additional Note(s): I have added a WHERE clause which omits words less than 5 characters in length, and some other words not to count. I have added the ORDER BY to give me the highest count first in...

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Joel Lipman
    • Category: MySQL
    • Language: *
  4. Convert a delimited string to tablehttps://www.joellipman.com/articles/else/database/convert-a-delimited-string-to-table.html

    "Title,Forenames,Surname" Return: ID Value ------ ---------------- 1 Title 2 Forenames 3 Surname Note the below example omits the ID column and just leaves VALUE. Why? Do we need a reason? How? For SQL Server 2005 or later, using T-SQL: DECLARE...

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Joel Lipman
    • Category: Databases
    • Language: *
Results 1 - 4 of 4