There are several technical wildcards, such as how the larger battery packs--four times larger than those of the Prius--will withstand the rigors of city driving,.
Special characters used in search keywords that can match any character or string of characters You can use wildcards to match various patterns of words or letters
A symbol that enables multiple matching values to be returned based on a shared feature The script language has two wildcards: The question mark (?) stands for any single character The asterisk (*) stands for any character string of any length For example, the file specification * * would return all the files, regardless of their file names The file specification * sc? would return all the file names with a three-character extension beginning with sc (such as compusrv scr, compusrv scx, and so on)
The wildcard character, *, is used in place of characters in your search terms, when more than one letter is likely to fit that space For example, a search for wom*n finds articles containing the terms "woman," "women," and "womyn "
A special character which acts as a substitute for one or more characters in a file name or extension
in several instances (most frequently on variable lists) you may specify a string (e g a label reference) containing wildcard characters A wildcard character tells EDA that in the position(s) marked by such a character any character may be present for a match The EDA wildcard character is the '*' symbol, which has two different meanings depending upon the position in the string: (1) at the end of the string it means "match all" (2) within a string "match any character" VAR* matches all variables starting with VAR, the characters beyond do not matter ***X looks for any four-character long label, having an 'X' in position 4 and any 3 characters preceeding it Of course the two meanings may be combined: ***X*
Symbols used in an electronic search to tell the search engine to look for all possible endings to a word The most common wildcard symbols are an asterisk (*) for multiple letters, numbers, or symbols, and a question mark (?) for single characters See Expanding a Search with Wildcards in Conducting Electronic Searches
A character that stands in for another character or group of characters Most search tools use an asterisk for this function Although the wildcard is most often used in truncation, it can also be used in the middle of words (for example, wom*n)
Characters that can substitute for other characters in a search query * stands for any number of characters; ? stands for any single character
A percent sign (%) that stands for one or more characters Allows the user to select multiple rows with a single query criteria For example, the query criteria of "a%" refers to all files that begin with an "a"
A symbol used in electronic searching to represent any character Wildcards can usually be used at the end of a word or within a word to search for all forms of the word Check the help screens of a particular database to determine the appropriate symbol to use (Unit 4> A Primer on Databases and Catalogs)
A character string that is used in text searches to make finding a match easier An asterisk (*) usually means find any character or set of characters
A character, usually an asterisk (*), that you use alone to specify all files and directories that are available, or with a few other letters to specify a group of files and directories that have a common element in their names For example, to specify all files and directories that begin with the letters “ch”, you would type: ch*
A symbol, such as ? or *, used in online searching to represent any letter or letters
A charecter used in certain commands that represents any charecter, or set of charecters
{i} card whose value is determined by the player (Cards); athlete or team chosen to compete though unqualified; unpredictable factor; character that can be used to represent every possible character combination (Computers)
A character that can be used to represent any other character or series of characters in a statement For instance, the wildcard "*" allows "DAN*Y" to refer to both "DANNY" and "DANDY " Useful in searches when you don't know the exact text you are looking for, and in specifying and action to be performed on a group of files