

The only big issue with this solution is that you can’t open the wiki page right from the search tab. Woo hoo! You can now perform a full-text search through all the wiki content that you have. Insert the URL you copied from SharePoint and save!.To create a Website tab, go to the “+” next to your other tabs in the channel and search for “Website.”.Copy the URL of that SharePoint page–we’ll use it to create a Website tab in your Microsoft Teams channel.Now you should see the search results with your wiki pages. On the top right corner of the page, find “Search this site.” Search for “*.mht” (w/o quotes).Once in SharePoint, go to “Return to classic SharePoint.”.Click the “.” next to “Add cloud storage” at the top and go to “Open in SharePoint.”.Open the “Files” tab at the top of your channel window.Otherwise, the easiest way to find where exactly your wiki data is stored inside SharePoint, is to get to SharePoint from your “Files” channel tab. If you already have that link, you can skip this step. Step-By-Step Instructionsįind a link to the SharePoint site of your team. We’re done with theory, now let’s jump into detailed step-by-step instructions. Then we’ll add a SharePoint search function as a “Website” tab to Microsoft Teams channel. So, to do a full-text search inside the built-in wiki, we’ll scope the SharePoint full-text search to the “Teams Wiki Data” folder and “.mth” extensions. mht extensions inside a folder named after the channel in “Teams Wiki Data.” We’ll use the fact that the Microsoft Teams built-in wiki stores all of its data in a document library in the SharePoint team site of the team that created it. Follow the step-by-step guide in this post, and you'll be able to perform a full-text search with highlighting through your wiki content right inside Microsoft Teams. This workaround will allow you to do a full-text search through the Microsoft Teams built-in wiki. In this blog post I’ll share with you less of a baked solution, and more of a workaround that I found on the Microsoft Community forums.

Not being able to search the Teams built-in Wikis disqualifies it as a fully functional knowledge database.
