Google Dorking
1. " "
A query with terms in quotes finds pages containing the exact quoted phrase. For example, “Larry Page“ finds pages containing the phrase "Larry Page” exactly.
2. OR |
OR for which you may also use | (vertical bar), applies to the search terms immediately adjacent to it. The first and second examples will find pages that include either "Tahiti" or "Hawaii" or both terms, but not pages that contain neither “Tahiti” nor “Hawaii”.
3. AND
Different from OR capital AND searches for pages using all words combined.
4. -
To find pages without a particular term, put a – sign operator in front of the word in the query.
The – sign indicates that you want to subtract or exclude pages that contain a specific term.
Do not put a space between the – and the word.
5. ( )
Allows grouping of operators and helps dictate order
6. in, to
Convert one unit to another.
Works with currencies, weights, temperatures, etc.
1 dollar in rupees 1 celsius to kelvin 1kg to lbs
7. cache:
Returns the most recent cached version of a web page (providing the page is indexed, of course).
Example: cache:http://apple.com
8. filetype:
Restrict results to those of a certain filetype. E.g., PDF, DOCX, TXT, PPT, etc.
Note: The ext: operator can also be used, the results are identical.
Example: apple filetype:pdf / apple ext:pdf
9. ext:
Similar to `filetype:`
10. site:
Google will restrict your search results to the site or domain you specify. For example, admissions site:http://lse.ac.uk will show admissions information from London School of Economics’ site.
11. related:
The query related:URL will list web pages that are similar to the web page you specify.
For instance, related:http://consumerreports.org will list web pages that are similar to the Consumer Reports home page.
12. intitle:
The query intitle:term restricts results to documents containing term in the title. For instance, [flu shot intitle:help] will return documents that mention “help” in their titles, and mention the words “flu” and “shot” anywhere in the document (title or not).
13. allintitle:
If you start query with allintitle: Google restricts results to those containing all the query terms you specify in the title. For example, [ allintitle: detect plagiarism ] will return only documents that contain the words “detect” and “plagiarism” in the title.
14. inurl:
Google restrict the results to documents containing that word in URL. For instance, inurl:print site:http://googleguide.com searches for pages on Google Guide in which URL contains print. It finds pdf files that are in directory or folder named “print” on website
15. allinurl:
Google restricts results to those containing all the query terms you specify in the URL.
For example, allinurl: google faq will return only documents that contain the words google and faq in the URL, such as http://google.com/help/faq.html.