Let me give you an example:
-
there is a community on lemmy.world (whereisthisplace) - https://lemmy.world/c/whereisthisplace
-
I go on lemmy.ml and search for
whereisthisplace
-
my search parameters are: {Communities} {All} {Top All Time}, {Community: All} {Creator: All}
-
but when I search for (eg.)
Apple
I get “Apple@lemmy.world”
is it because no one is subscribed form this istance?
Well that is interesting.
- search for
whereisthisplace
= no results - search for
whereisthisplace@lemmy.world
= no results - search for
https://lemmy.world/c/whereisthisplace
= no results - search (again) for
whereisthisplace
= get a hit
(additonaly)
(in private browser)
- search for
whereisthisplace
= get a hit
It’s like lemmy.ml “created” a link (when I did search for
https://lemmy.world/c/whereisthisplace
) and now it shows itNotes:
- sorry to creators of
whereisthisplace
to use you community as example - I did a test with a different community and the results are the same
- search for
you would need to search this “!whereisthisplace@lemmy.world” in the search box. this will bring that community into lemmy.ml.
@thirteenthfrog you need to search for the community link, in this case, you should search for “https://lemmy.world/c/whereisthisplace”
Well yeah, but lets say that I just want to search for
whereisthisplace
over all instances and see where this community is (even on multiple ones). The only other approach is to go to each instance and search for it.But my question still remains - why some communities are shown (eg.: Apple) and some are not (eg.: whereisthisplace)
Because someone on your instance has already searched for the community directly or subscribed to it so it has been federated to your instance.