Customize Query Suggestions In SharePoint Search
Query spelling suggestions are words that appear below the search box as a user types a query. SharePoint automatically creates a query suggestion when you've clicked a search result for a query at least six times. For example, if you've entered the query word "coffee" and then clicked a search result six times, "coffee" automatically becomes a query suggestion. Automatic query suggestions are generated daily for each result source and each site collection, so the query suggestions can be different for different result sources and site collections. SharePoint Online has both a classic and a modern search experience, learn about the differences between the classic and modern search experiences in SharePoint Online. The modern search experience uses the same default result source as the classic search experience. Automatic query suggestions for the default result source appear in both the classic and modern search experiences. You can manually create your own lists of query suggestions and import them to SharePoint.
Manual query suggestions apply to all result sources, all site collections, and to both search experiences. To create query suggestions for multiple languages, you'll need to create a separate file for each language. The language determines how the query suggestions are processed internally in the search system. All manual query suggestions are always displayed for all languages. Add each phrase as a separate line in the text file that you create and save the file in UTF-8 encoding. Query suggestions are turned on by default. To turn them off, go to Search Suggestions and uncheck Show search suggestions. Then select the Admin tile to open the admin center. In the left pane, under Admin centers, select SharePoint. If this opens the new SharePoint admin center, select Classic SharePoint admin center in the left pane. In the left pane of the classic SharePoint admin center, select search, and then click Query Suggestion Settings on the search administration page. Open a text editor of your choice, and enter a list of terms that you want the system to always suggest to users.
Only add one term per line to the text file, and don't mix languages in the text file. Save the text file to a location that's accessible from SharePoint Online. Import from text file. When you import query suggestions, any existing ones will be overwritten. Browse to the file that you want to import. Go to Language for suggestion phrases, and select the processing language of your query suggestions. It should match the language of the terms in the text file. You can edit a list of query suggestions that you've manually created. To edit a list that you've already imported in to SharePoint, choose Export to text file, update the text file with your changes, and then re-import it. After you've uploaded your query suggestions file, it might take a few hours until your query suggestions are displayed. You can check that they're working properly by entering a phrase from your list of query suggestions in the search box. The query suggestion should appear below the search box. To get rid of a list of query terms, you must overwrite it. Do this by importing an empty text file. You can also prevent terms from appearing in the search box. To do this, create a text file with the query terms that you never want users to see below the search box, and then import it to Never suggest phrases.
I drove the TR3A around for the rest of the spring and summer, but in September I had to sell it to help raise money for my sojourn to England on a fellowship I had won at university. In December of 1967, I had travelled from my UK home in Manchester to London in order to join a group of friends on a ski trip to the Tyrol in Kitzbuhel, Austria. When I arrived I found that my good friend Art had bought a new MGB. He said he had been looking at the TRs as well, but decided on the MGB. He added that he heard a rumour that the TR4As were going to have their price reduced to make way for a new model. That was all the motivation I needed. 2700. I barely made it back in time to catch the train to Kitzbuhel. It took some time for my loan to arrive through the banking systems of the 60s, but finally the car was ready to pickup in mid-February. By the time I finalised the payment in February, the new TR5-PI and the TR250 had been announced and the interest in the remaining export model TR4As had collapsed. 2400 and I was elated. 300 to spend on gas and travel in the TR. 300 (125 pounds Sterling) in Britain back then. Around mid-February in 1967, Roy, my friend from Manchester, drove me down to the Standard-Triumph factory in Coventry to pick up my new, forest green, TR4A complete with leather seats and wood-rimmed steering wheel. I had pre-planned a factory tour, so I did that, all the while trying to contain my excitement to get into my shiny new sports car and drive and drive and drive. Good times I will never forget. Yes, I used to have a pipe in my mouth most of the time. I actually smoked it sometimes!
I was told the car will be arriving to Brunei around 29th December 2009 just before New Year. That really got my adrenaline pumped and I called my wife and told her that the car is finally here. So we met up lunch together with another buddy of mine, Albert. After lunch, I brought Albert along to QAF showroom (no one was suppose to know it arrived today but anyway I just bring him along). When I reached the showroom, I was greeted by Alex and she show me to my car. And there it is waiting inside the workshop. I can't see the roof either! Yes, I want my first Porsche to be a manual transmission! That is me trying to start the engine! LOL and the damn car just won't start! If you see in between the wipers there is one small tiny red knob. It is a pre-safe system to prevent unauthorise start of engine before PDI (Porsche Delivery Inspection). Alex pulled the red knob and I restart the ignition and the whole engine just scream into action!