Please enter search query.
Search <book_title>...
Arctera™ Insight eDiscovery Help
Last Published:
2025-02-10
Product(s):
Veritas Alta Archiving (1.0), Veritas Alta eDiscovery (1.0)
- About Arctera Insight eDiscovery
- Getting started with Insight eDiscovery
- Insight eDiscovery roles
- Managing investigations
- About Targeted Collections
- About Searches in investigation
- Working with searched emails
- Working with searched collaboration messages
- Working with searched files
- Working with Advanced ECA searches
- Applying tags to the Advanced ECA search items
- Applying labels to the Advanced ECA search items
- Exporting the Advanced ECA search items
- Exporting an Advanced ECA search summary report
- About Mail Reassignment
- About labels
- About legal holds
- About Tags
- About search log
- Managing cases
- About searches in eDiscovery
- Managing case documents
- Managing redaction reasons
- Managing reviews
- Reviewing emails
- Reviewing collaboration messages
- Reviewing files
- Managing production sets
- Annotating and redacting content in native viewer
- Managing exports
- Collaborative reports
- Insight eDiscovery alerts
- Email Continuity
- Methods for searching cases and accounts
- Boolean operator searches
- Methods for searching tables and reports
- Insight eDiscovery Frequently Asked Questions
- Best practices, limitations, and known issues
- Insight eDiscovery updates in previous releases
Wildcard searches
A wildcard search uses a wildcard character at the end of a search term to represent one or more unspecified characters. The question mark ? represents a single character, and the asterisk * represents one or more characters.
For example:
appl? finds archived messages with search terms such as apple or apply.
comp* finds archived messages with search terms such as computing, computer, or company.
Note:
The wildcard character must be placed at the end of the search term. The search term must contain at least three characters before the wildcard character.
In phrase searches, the * and ? characters are treated as special characters, not wildcards.