K-Meleon
Documentation > Tutorials > SearchEngineSelection
In K-Meleon, it is easy to use a wide array of search engines. It is a simple process to add new search engines and to set the default search engine.
1. Go to Tools > Web Search > Configure... From the Finding Websites page, choose the second tab: Web Search. You can see the search engines used as default in drop-down lists. You can change any of them.
2. You can add a new one by clicking on Add Entry. This creates another drop-down menu, where you can choose a new search engine.
3. The first entry of each opened list is Remove This Entry. Choose this if you want to remove it. Whatever you add or remove, you can change back later.
4. DuckDuckGo is set as the default search engine. You can change this by going to Tools > Web Search and uncheck Use As Default Engine. As a result, the default search engine will always be the one you used for the last time.
5. To make a search engine the default one regardless of which one you used earlier, first choose the engine you want to set as default. When the Search dialogue appears, you may press either OK or Cancel. The chosen search engine will be marked in the list. Check Use As Default Engine to make it remain the default one.
6. The "Keyword Autosearch" feature allows you to type a search query directly in the URL bar and search for it as long as it does not have a ".com", ".net", etc. in it.
7. In order to turn it on, go to Tools > Web Search > Configure... and on the Finding Websites page you will find a checkbox to mark. You can choose a search engine from the list below the checkbox.
8. To further customize the search strings, you can select one of the search engines on the Search Engines page tab
9. If you select one and choose Edit, you can change the details. Clicking Add, you can add a new one. On the Search Engines page, you can see many examples. You will need to use the exact URL but can choose any caption.
10. Give it a try. Type something random like "random" or "cat with nine legs" or "ninety-four pickles" into the URL bar and you will see that after a few seconds of trying to resolve the search query as an address, it will skip along to your search engine and display the results for the search query of what you typed in the URL bar.
If you see the pattern in all of this, you could probably come up with your own URLs to use to do your own customized searches.
(This tutorial was originally written by Brian (bst82551 (from archive)). Later rewritten to match version 76.4.X.)