jonasw , 1 month ago Kagi: https://discuss.tchncs.de/pictrs/image/c1456a12-871e-4fda-8e50-716eb0d7de6d.png First result is the official documentation with the page that contains information about the in operator This was the result: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.0/functions.html BUT it is the documentation for 9.0 Though if I would use postgresql documentation very often I could just use the Kagi feature that rewrites URLs with a regex, so I can replace it always with the latest version. Kagi Documentation for that feature: https://help.kagi.com/kagi/features/redirects.html#redirects-url-rewrites Some use cases of redirects include: Change domains to a preferred domain (reddit.com to old.reddit.com) Fixing links to outdated documentation with bad SEO Rewriting proxied pages (like Google AMP) to their source URL Changing any http link to https
Kagi:
https://discuss.tchncs.de/pictrs/image/c1456a12-871e-4fda-8e50-716eb0d7de6d.png
First result is the official documentation with the page that contains information about the in operator
This was the result: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.0/functions.html
BUT it is the documentation for 9.0
Though if I would use postgresql documentation very often I could just use the Kagi feature that rewrites URLs with a regex, so I can replace it always with the latest version.
Kagi Documentation for that feature:
https://help.kagi.com/kagi/features/redirects.html#redirects-url-rewrites
Some use cases of redirects include: Change domains to a preferred domain (reddit.com to old.reddit.com) Fixing links to outdated documentation with bad SEO Rewriting proxied pages (like Google AMP) to their source URL Changing any http link to https
Some use cases of redirects include: