rust (site:programming.dev | site:lemmy.world)
That seemed to work, I guess you could keep appending instances?
Its just google, so no user specific impact.
But what about all instances?
2 is solvable if this search is possible.
rust (site:programming.dev | site:lemmy.world)
That seemed to work, I guess you could keep appending instances?
Its just google, so no user specific impact.
Here is my attempt in a separate post:
I feel like though if you put too much site filters, results might be reduced in an unexpected way (like searching “X” thing on lemmy.world and lemmy.ml might produce fewer results than searching “X” on lemmy.world only)
Your instance holds a copy of the information, so just use your instance url. Unless your instance is down, in which case you should not use your instance url
StrawberryPigtails@lemmy.sdf.org 4 days ago
You might try searxng, though due to the way federation works, that’s not really necessary. All you need to do is search one of the more federated instances like lemmy.world or lemmy.ml or lemmy.sdf.org and you will pull up anything that server has seen related to your search. User blocks aren’t really an issue, since you don’t need to be logged in. The only time searching multiple instances would be helpful is if you know the post originally might have come from an instance that doesn’t widely federate or is heavily blocked from federation.
Also I’ve seen quite a few folks from lemmy.ca so you might try your instance’s own search. It will usually search federated content as well as local content.
The main issue though is like @CameronDev@programming.dev suggested. Lemmy is young, it doesn’t have nearly 20 years of back archives that you can search nor the huge user base that Reddit had to create such a rich back archive. It’s getting there, but it is a problem only time and usage of Lemmy will solve.
As for the best Lemmy app, You might give Voyager a go. I use it on iOS and have been quite happy with it.