Emacs/docs/latest/emacs/Incremental-Search

From Get docs

15.1 Incremental Search

The principal search command in Emacs is incremental: it begins searching as soon as you type the first character of the search string. As you type in the search string, Emacs shows you where the string (as you have typed it so far) would be found. When you have typed enough characters to identify the place you want, you can stop. Depending on what you plan to do next, you may or may not need to terminate the search explicitly with RET.

C-s
Incremental search forward (isearch-forward).
C-r
Incremental search backward (isearch-backward).

You can also invoke incremental search from the menu bar’s ‘Edit->Search’ menu.

Basic Isearch    Basic incremental search commands.
Repeat Isearch    Searching for the same string again.
Isearch Yank    Commands that grab text into the search string or else edit the search string.
Error in Isearch    When your string is not found.
Special Isearch    Special input in incremental search.
Not Exiting Isearch    Prefix argument and scrolling commands.
Isearch Minibuffer    Incremental search of the minibuffer history.