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When performing a search from the browser bar, I'd like to be able to to use a symbol in my search string to change the region settings, something like "%au budget" to specify an Australian search and then "%% oscars" to change back to international.

This would have exactly the same effect as changing the region on the Kagi search page before performing a search.

    Unless I'm imagining things I believe there already was a bang like option for the first part, after someone made a similar suggestion, but somehow I can't find it anymore. Either way, good idea.

      How do you propose we make this feature discoverable to the new user?

        4 days later

        Vlad Well written, accessible documentation which encourages power users to read about available features

        11 days later
        21 days later

        I ofter switch between my country and International change. I'd love to to have a quick bang for that like !reg int phrase, !reg pl phrase.

          Merged 1 post from Quick Bang to change search region.
            8 days later

            I usually search in "International" mode, but quite regularly I find myself redoing the same query, but limited to my region. I also occasionally need to go in the other direction. My reasons are usually:

            • I first check "globally" for a term, but then want to see results from local sites;
            • I can't find anything relevant locally for a term that should return results, so I want to widen to "international" to see if there are better results in English, or if I've misspelled the name or something;
            • Because the region switch is "sticky", it's occasionally in the "wrong" mode for my current query, so I need to switch it back;

            Currently, switching between international/regional search on Desktop requires using mouse to reach the little dropdown below the query, open it, and select the right setting. I'd like to avoid having to use my mouse for this, and ideally have a shortcut that just flips between "International" and the most recently used region. Less ideally, a shortcut that puts focus in the "settings" row below the query, so I could navigate to the region switch with arrows/hjkl.

              Merged 1 post from A keyboard shortcut to quickly switch between local and international search.
                3 months later

                Vlad I know I'm kind of late to the party here, but you might want to look at DuckDuckGo for inspiration, since it offers a r: parameter specifically for this purpose, which is documented here.

                • Vlad replied to this.

                  Vlad I don't agree here.
                  it would be difficult to separate a "region bang" from a "standard bang"
                  we need a prefix for the user who wants to specify a region inline
                  a namespace like !r:de or !reg:de.

                  This "bang namespace" will help us for eliminate future bang clashes, and reduce mental fatigue
                  So, I'm against direct "country code bangs".

                  One one side there is bang fatique, on the other is keeping it simple and consistent. Remembering !r:xx syntax sounds difficult already IMO

                  6 days later

                  What happens when the ISO country code clashes with an existing duck duck go bang? E.g. I often use the existing duck duck go bang !au which searches the Arch Linux AUR repository.

                  I would also prefer the duck duck go syntax, r:au, it's easy to remember and type, is equivalent to the well-established site: syntax, and doesn't clash with bangs.

                  My country's ISO code also clashes with an existing bang... I guess the only way to implement it correctly is investing in personalized bangs.

                    We will have a way to perosnalize bangs soon.

                      Having to remember custom bang overrides would definitely result in "bang fatigue"... much more so than a simple scoped notation like r: or the proposed !r:. Clashes would also be confusing for people who, like me, come from years of using DuckDuckGo.