So far, in our Windows 7 Overview series, we have published the following:- Windows 7 beta quick review
- Windows 7 Tips and Tricks
- Windows 7: Superbar overview
- Windows 7: HomeGroup Overview
- Windows 7: BitLocker To Go & Biometric improvements overview
- Windows 7: Easy Connect
- Windows 7: Problem Steps Recorder
- Windows 7: Action Center Overview
- Windows 7: User Account Control (UAC) Overview
- Windows 7: Calibate Your Display
- Windows 7: Federated Search
- Windows 7: Device Stage
- Windows 7: Internet Explorer 8 Overview
Microsoft has introduced search filters into Explorer making it easier to find what you want. Sort between file type, size, name, and many more with customized filters depending on what file you are located in.

Filters:
The introduction of filter searches can eliminate time browsing hundreds of matches, if you know any bits of information about the file. Each folder has a customized set list of filters automatically assigned to help return better results in your searches, depending on the contents inside of the folder.


Search Locations:
To help reduce the number of results found using the search, selected folders can be used to return greatest results in locations they selected. Also, network searching can be used when browsing for files in a HomeGroup network.

Save Search:
A quick feature to save your previous search results and return to them later. Save customized filters and locations within the save search file, being able to bring them back at a later date.

Preview Pane:
When browsing search results, take a quick preview of the selected documents in the preview pane on the right to help eliminate time opening and reading documents. The preview pane makes finding phrases or words in a document easy too.
















Personally I like pictures and overviews. I'm simple minded like that.
However, I did try searching for a variable name in my code (just like you suggested) but I only got the actual file and it seemed like search didn't return any results of files whose content matched my search. Plus I didn't see any way to show the advanced search pane that Vista has.
This overview is a bit less clear than the rest
I was accustomed to this kind of search in Vista
WinFS has been dead for like 4 years and its tech ideas what put to use in other products, windows search however retains all the functionality it wanted to have aka instant search, filters, tags, network searching. etc. without the need for WinFS
However, on June 23, 2006, the WinFS team at Microsoft announced that WinFS would no longer be delivered as a separate product,[3] and some components would be brought under the umbrella of other technologies - like the object-relational mapping components into ADO.NET Entity Framework; support for unstructured data, adminless mode of operation, support for file system objects via the FILESTREAM data type, and hierarchical data[18] in SQL Server 2008, then codenamed Katmai,[19] as well as integration with Win32 APIs and Windows Shell and support for traversal of hierarchies by traversing relationships into later releases of Microsoft SQL Server;[18] and the synchronization components into Microsoft Sync Framework.[18] However, having a shared-schema storage system built into a future iteration of Microsoft Windows has not yet been ruled out.[18]
With that announcement, most analysts assumed that the WinFS project was being killed off. But in November 2006, Steve Ballmer said in an interview that WinFS is being actively developed but integration into the Windows codebase will come only after the technology has fully incubated. It was subsequently confirmed in an interview with Bill Gates and that Microsoft plans to migrate applications like Windows Media Player, Windows Photo Gallery, Microsoft Office Outlook etc to use WinFS as the data storage back-end.[20]
I've tried both the IFilter from Adobe(some old version iirc) and from Foxit but it only seems to index the content of some pdf-files. I think it has to do with the version of the pdf-file.
This really should come preinstalled, pdfs are too common these days.
Commenting has either been disabled on this article or you are not logged in. Click here to login or register, its free!
Note: Anonymous commenting is disabled in order to keep the quality of responses to a high standard.