https://website.com/?q={}
. The curly braces indicate where your
search query goes; when run, {}
will be replaced with your (URL-encoded) search
term.https://www.google.com/search?q={}
. If you enter the search "my search terms",
then the URL
that is opened in your browser will be https://www.google.com/search?q=my%20search%terms
.Default: DuckDuckGo
While entering a query, suggestions can be shown for your query, the same as you'd see in a search engine in your browser. This setting controls the search engine to get suggestions from: DuckDuckGo (the default), Google, or "None" if you don't want any search suggestions.
Default: disabled
If enabled, the search query will initially be set to the text on your clipboard.
Default: enabled
DuckDuckGo supports "bangs", text-based shortcuts for
searching various sites on the web. For instance, when using DuckDuckGo, !w macOS
will
not search DuckDuckGo for "!w macOS", but will instead search Wikipedia for "macOS";
!w
is DuckDuckGo's "bang" shortcut for Wikipedia.
Depending on which site you're getting search suggestions from, bangs can interfere with those suggestions. Therefore, if all of the following hold:
then only the portion of the query without the bang will be used when fetching search suggestions.
When getting search suggestions from DuckDuckGo, you might want this setting disabled because DuckDuckGo does understand bangs and can offer suggestions accordingly. When using another search suggestion provider, which doesn't understand bangs, you probably want this setting to be enabled because otherwise the bangs will be treated as part of the query and will lead to worse search suggestions.
This setting does not affect what happens when you press enter to search; your query text will always be searched verbatim on the site of your choosing. This setting only affects the text used when fetching search suggestions.