The main search bar is stationary throughout HeinOnline
Once inside the New York Legal Research Library, the search bar will search only within this database, unless the Search All Databases box is ticked
Need something more robust? ClickAdvanced Search to perform a search using custom drop-downs
Need a refresher on how to construct a perfect search? Click Search Help for a quick reference guide to commonly used search syntax
Using the Main Search Bar
For example, enter the phrase "Wall Street"inside quotation marks into the search bar
Select where you want to search for this phrase: as an Author, appearing in the Title of any document or article, as a Citation, or in our Catalog as a title. Want to see your search in any of these fields, or appearing in the full text of a document?Select Just search for
Use the facets on the left side of the page to narrow your results by Date, Section Type, or Title
Terms matching the search query appear in bold text within the matching text page snippets
Sort search results by relevance, volume date, or title
Save to your MyHein account, email a result, display download options, or download a PDF using the icons on the right side of each search result.
Use the icons next to the sort-by bar to modify your current search, to search within results, to toggle all matching text pages, or to turn OFF infinite scroll
Using Advanced Search
Click Advanced Search to be taken to a page with custom facets to help maximize your research within this collection
Use the drop-downs to choose a variety of ways to search: Text, Title, Creator/Author, or Description
Add another search field if three isn't enough
Select a subcollection to search within, Ctrl + click to select multiple subcollections, or search in all
Pick a title by citation to search within
Restrict results within a date range and change how results are sorted
About Venn Diagram Search
Venn Diagram Searchoffers a visual representation of how search terms interact with each other
Helps users both refine their current search terms and become better researchers going forward
Searches are constructed by stringing together multiple terms separated by the Boolean operator "AND," with phrases grouped together in quotation marks
Results on the right side of the page pertain to the search as we originally constructed it (represented by the red slice in the center of the intersecting circles)
Select Clear for the ability to hover over the different segments of the diagram and see all possible search term combinations from our original query.
In our example, we can see results for:
railroad AND "Erie Canal"
railroad AND immigrant
"Erie Canal" AND immigrant
the terms railroad, "Erie Canal,"and immigrant individually
Sort the results, save or export, turn to the specific page of a result, or start at the beginning of a given title