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Step 2 for Windows PubCrawler:
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Please report problems to pubcrawlerREMOVECAPShelp@gmail.com
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pubmed 'Candida' candida[ALL] BUTNOT candida albicans[ALL] |
This query searches PubMed for all articles about Candida, but not those that contain the phrase Candida albicans. The alias for this search is 'Candida'. |
pubmed 'Rivals' Dujon B[AUTH] pubmed 'Rivals' Oliver SG[AUTH] pubmed 'Rivals' Philippsen P[AUTH] |
These 3 queries search PubMed for articles by three different authors. The results are merged into a single alias called 'Rivals'. |
pubmed 'Yeast' yeast[ALL] AND (DNA[ALL] OR gene[ALL]) pubmed 'Yeast' (Mol Cell Biol[JOUR] OR Curr Genet[JOUR]) AND yeast[ALL] |
These 2 queries search PubMed for papers about yeast. One looks for papers about yeast genes or yeast DNA. The other looks for papers about yeast published in the journals Mol. Cell. Biol. or Curr. Genet. The results are merged into a single alias called 'Yeast'. |
genbank 50000:350000[SLEN] AND Venter JC[AUTH] AND human[ORGN] |
This query searches GenBank for all human sequences 50 - 350 kb long, with JC Venter as author. No alias was defined for this search. |
genbank 'Acyl-CoA synth*' acyl-coa synth*[ALL] BUTNOT est[PROP] |
This query searches GenBank for sequences entires containing the text "Acyl-CoA synth..." but excluding EST sequences. The asterisk is a wild-card so the query will match words such as "synthesis" or "synthase". The alias for this search is 'Acyl-CoA synth*'. |
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There are 3 parts to each query in PubCrawler:
database name: pubmed or genbank.
alias: a short name for the search, such as 'Candida'
or 'Rivals'.
search description: The full syntax for this is set out in the NCBI Boolean Query Syntax document. The most important things are:
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2. Try composing one search query of your own. Before putting it into PubCrawler, test it directly at NCBI as follows:
3. If it works, you can now add the search description to
your PubCrawler config file. This file is normally called
pubcrawl.config
and is located in the WinPubCrawler folder. The config file contains
your search strategies and your preferences about how you want the results
to be presented.
4. Open the file pubcrawl.config using a word-processor in text-only mode (like Notepad), and scroll to the bottom of the file (you must go below the line reading "##### SEARCH SPECIFICATION ######"). In this file, a hash mark (#) indicates a comment, so any text to the right of a hash mark is ignored (up to the end of that line).
5. Paste the query you just composed into the bottom of the pubcrawl.config file. On the same line, in front of your search query, write the database name and an alias for your search. For example:
pubmed 'gene maps' gene[ALL] AND map[ALL] BUTNOT map kinase[ALL]or
genbank 'my first attempt at a search' chloroplast[ORGN] BUTNOT rbcL[ALL]6. Save the pubcrawl.config file (as a text-only or ASCII file).
7. Run PubCrawler with the -v option (for verbose output) by typing pubcrawler -v into your DOS-Box, and your new search should be included in the results.
8. Add more searches as you wish (go back to point 2, above). Try making some that share an alias name.
9. Finally, you can delete the example searches in pubcrawl.config, unless you're very interested in yeast or Craig Venter. Or you can put hash marks (#) in front of them to turn them into comments (so the program will ignore them).