title: SearchFilter Modifiers summary: Use suffixes on your ORM queries. # SearchFilter Modifiers The `filter` and `exclude` operations specify exact matches by default. However, there are a number of suffixes that you can put on field names to change this behavior. These are represented as `SearchFilter` subclasses and include. * [api:StartsWithFilter] * [api:EndsWithFilter] * [api:PartialMatchFilter] * [api:GreaterThanFilter] * [api:GreaterThanOrEqualFilter] * [api:LessThanFilter] * [api:LessThanOrEqualFilter] An example of a `SearchFilter` in use: :::php // fetch any player that starts with a S $players = Player::get()->filter(array( 'FirstName:StartsWith' => 'S' 'PlayerNumber:GreaterThan' => '10' )); // to fetch any player that's name contains the letter 'z' $players = Player::get()->filterAny(array( 'FirstName:PartialMatch' => 'z' 'LastName:PartialMatch' => 'z' )); Developers can define their own [api:SearchFilter] if needing to extend the ORM filter and exclude behaviors. These suffixes can also take modifiers themselves. The modifiers currently supported are `":not"`, `":nocase"` and `":case"`. These negate the filter, make it case-insensitive and make it case-sensitive, respectively. The default comparison uses the database's default. For MySQL and MSSQL, this is case-insensitive. For PostgreSQL, this is case-sensitive. The following is a query which will return everyone whose first name starts with "S", either lowercase or uppercase: :::php $players = Player::get()->filter(array( 'FirstName:StartsWith:nocase' => 'S' )); // use :not to perform a converse operation to filter anything but a 'W' $players = Player::get()->filter(array( 'FirstName:StartsWith:not' => 'W' )); ## API Documentation * [api:SearchFilter]