Search A Page For A Word Mac

Search A Page For A Word Mac 10,0/10 3251 votes

Apple's line of Mac computers come with the OS X operating system, which does not include basic Windows applications such as Microsoft Office. Apple's word processor is called Pages and comes with the Mac, but you must purchase iWork to use it. IWork also includes Numbers, which is Apple's equivalent of Excel, and Keynote, which is comparable to PowerPoint. IWork applications allow you to export your documents to Windows format and open Windows formatted files, such as Word documents, on your Mac. Microsoft Office is also available for Mac, in which case you can open any Office document format. If you haven't bought iWork or Microsoft Office for Mac, you can use Apple's TextEdit application or download a free office software package such as OpenOffice.

To search a web page for specific words type 'Ctrl' + 'F' on your keyboard (Command + 'F' on a Mac). Then, type the word you are searching for in the window that pops up: For example, you could look for the word 'technology' as shown below.

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Opera for mac bookmark bar icons not showing. By • 2:00 pm, April 6, 2015 • • Searching within Safari pages is pretty easy, but well-hidden. Photo: Rob LeFebvre On the Mac, it’s super-easy to search for a word or phrase within the currently loaded page.

You simply hit Command-F on your keyboard and Safari, Chrome or any other web browser will open up a little field to type your search terms into. Advertisement But what about when you’re using mobile Safari on your iPhone or iPad? How do you find a specific word or phrase there? It’s pretty simple, but not super-intuitive.

Here’s our recipe for finding search terms on your iPhone’s version of Safari. Ingredients: • iPhone or iPad running iOS • mobile Safari • fingers Directions: Tap open your Safari app and navigate to a page you want to search within. Once the page has loaded, tap into the URL bar at the top (where the web page’s address is). Type in your search term (“Bendgate” in our example) and you’ll get results for both the web and your current page. Tap the search results from the Current Page and Safari will open the current web page back up, and highlight the first of the search term results right on the page.

You can navigate through all the terms Safari has found with the left and right arrows found at the bottom of the screen, too. When you’re finished, hit the Done button in the lower right-hand corner of the screen, and you’ll go back to basic web browsing.

This will work no matter which search engine you’ve chosen in your iOS Settings app.