You can quickly find information inside of long web pages using Safari's Find function. By default you are searching only for the letters at the start of words, but you can change this to search for any place the letters appear. You can also select some text in a web page and then search for other occurrences of that text.
Not sure what you mean. The search bar below the search bar? There is a search field on Wikipedia pages, but that is just a way to search for another page on of Wikipedia, not for something inside the page you are viewing.
Lindy
10 years ago
Doris... your way works on Wikipedia but not all web pages have a search field. Gary's way works with all web pages.
Thanks Gary for a great service you do for the Mac community!
Steve Cantrell
10 years ago
I just wanted to reach out and say thank you for all the videos that you do. I never thought I would need a function such as the one described in this video, but it seems very relevant on my daily work on the computer. Thank you and keep up the good videos!
Janet
10 years ago
Agreed! these videos are wonderful way to expand my use of my Mac. Today's tip is one I used right away. Thank you
Roylyn Parks
10 years ago
Amen! Always great videos!
Scott Beattie
10 years ago
Very useful tutorial. I was not aware that there was a way to change the search from starts with to contains - nor that the search within page functionality had changed in the last few versions. This tip will greatly improve my search productivity.
Kerrie Redgate
10 years ago
Once again you have expanded the usefulness of a topic that had seemed deceptively simple. Who would know these extra every-day functions were there?! Thank you, Gary!
Just wondering why you didn't use the search bar on the page directly below the search bar you used?
Not sure what you mean. The search bar below the search bar? There is a search field on Wikipedia pages, but that is just a way to search for another page on of Wikipedia, not for something inside the page you are viewing.
Doris... your way works on Wikipedia but not all web pages have a search field. Gary's way works with all web pages.
Thanks Gary for a great service you do for the Mac community!
I just wanted to reach out and say thank you for all the videos that you do. I never thought I would need a function such as the one described in this video, but it seems very relevant on my daily work on the computer. Thank you and keep up the good videos!
Agreed! these videos are wonderful way to expand my use of my Mac. Today's tip is one I used right away. Thank you
Amen! Always great videos!
Very useful tutorial. I was not aware that there was a way to change the search from starts with to contains - nor that the search within page functionality had changed in the last few versions. This tip will greatly improve my search productivity.
Once again you have expanded the usefulness of a topic that had seemed deceptively simple. Who would know these extra every-day functions were there?! Thank you, Gary!