Pootle provides a searching functionality that allows translators and reviewers to search through translations for some text. The search box is shown close to the top of the page. Searching can be used to find specific things you want to work on, see how issues were solved before, or to verify consistency in your translations.
Search results are up to date, and will reflect the current translations in Pootle.
It is important to realize that when a new search term is entered, searching will take place inside the currently viewed domain. If you are currently at the top level of your project, the whole project will be searched. If you are viewing a directory, only files in that directory will be searched. If you are already viewing/translating a file, only that file will be searched.
The first result will be shown in context in the file where it is found. When you click “Skip”, “Suggest” or “Translate” it will provide the next match to the search (in the original domain) until all matches were presented. Remember that if you edit the search query while viewing search results in a specific file, your new query will only search in that specific file.
The search function improved in Pootle 1.2. Next to the search textbox, there’s an arrow icon that when clicked will toggle some options for the search to be done.
At this stage, the advanced search option allows searching in specific fields. It is possible to select to search for text in source and target texts as well as in comments and locations. Any combination of these options is accepted.
As a default, it will search for source and target strings. If a non-default search is performed, the search widget will slightly change its background colour.
The basic searching uses pogrep which will look for the substring in the source and target text. It supports Unicode normalization. Alternatively, a Pootle server might be installed with an indexing engine (PyLucene or Xapian) to speed up searching. Search results can differ slightly from the normal search, based on the indexing that engine uses.
Some basic query in Lucene syntax is also possible. More information on Lucene queries.