5

I created a custom taxonomy named 'technologies' but cannot query multiple terms like I can with categories or tags.

These querys DO work:

query_posts('tag=goldfish,airplanes');

query_posts('technologies=php');

However, neither of the following work correctly:

query_posts('technologies=php,sql');

query_posts('technologies=php&technologies=sql');

My objective: Show all posts with a technology of 'php' and all posts with a technology of 'sql'

Any ideas? Is this even possible? Thanks!

Chris Voth
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9 Answers9

10

Apparently query_posts cannot help in this specific situation. (Hopefully it will be added in future versions of Wordpress!) The solution is to use a custom select query like the following:

SELECT * 
FROM $wpdb->posts
LEFT JOIN $wpdb->term_relationships ON($wpdb->posts.ID = $wpdb->term_relationships.object_id)
LEFT JOIN $wpdb->term_taxonomy ON($wpdb->term_relationships.term_taxonomy_id = $wpdb->term_taxonomy.term_taxonomy_id)
LEFT JOIN $wpdb->terms ON($wpdb->term_taxonomy.term_id = $wpdb->terms.term_id)
WHERE $wpdb->posts.post_type = 'post' 
AND $wpdb->posts.post_status = 'publish'
AND $wpdb->term_taxonomy.taxonomy = 'technologies'
AND $wpdb->terms.slug = 'php' OR $wpdb->terms.slug = 'css'
ORDER BY $wpdb->posts.post_date DESC

More information can be found at the Wordpress Codex: http://codex.wordpress.org/Displaying_Posts_Using_a_Custom_Select_Query

Chris Voth
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  • A manual query like the above is exactly what I've ended up using. Right now it's the only way it works if you don't want to run multiple get_posts() queries one after the other (and you don't). – bobsoap Aug 16 '10 at 03:00
  • This query looks like it might work for what I am trying to do, but what if I wanted to search for multiple terms on one post? I've tried changing the OR to an AND (on line 9 of the query) and it doesn't seem to work. – jasonaburton Aug 13 '12 at 12:27
6

This is a bit of a delayed reply, but it's first on Google at the moment for "wordpress related posts by multiple terms" so thought I'd contribute my findings.

Since this question was posted Wordpress has been changed to allow for this type of query. This will give you a list of posts related by any of the custom taxonomy terms assigned to an object:

$post_cats = wp_get_object_terms(get_the_ID(), 'video_category', array('fields' => 'ids'));

$args=array(
    "tax_query" => array(
        array(
            "taxonomy" => "video_category",
            "field" => "id",
            "terms" => $post_cats
        )
    ),
    'post__not_in' => array(get_the_ID()),
    'post_type' => 'video',
    'posts_per_page' => 8,
    'caller_get_posts' => 1
);

$related_by_cats = new WP_Query($args);

This is my first contribution to SO, I hope it's up to standards.

Adam
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4

You can use this plugin:

http://scribu.net/wordpress/query-multiple-taxonomies/

scribu
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1

Does this work? query_posts('tag=bread+baking+recipe')

From: http://codex.wordpress.org/Template_Tags/query_posts

markratledge
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  • Unfortunately, query_posts('technologies=css+html'); does not return any posts, even though there are several posts associated with both of those terms. – Chris Voth Jul 21 '09 at 13:38
1

OK, so here is my crack at this. It's a little hacky, but it works. The big downside is that any other query variables need to be re-added, as when multiple terms are invoked, the fail strips out all of the query vars.

Also, I did not test this against querying across multiple taxonomies. This only works within a specific taxonomy. Use at your own risk.

function multi_tax_terms($where) {
    global $wp_query;
    if ( strpos($wp_query->query_vars['term'], ',') !== false && strpos($where, "AND 0") !== false ) {
        // it's failing because taxonomies can't handle multiple terms
        //first, get the terms
        $term_arr = explode(",", $wp_query->query_vars['term']);
        foreach($term_arr as $term_item) {
            $terms[] = get_terms($wp_query->query_vars['taxonomy'], array('slug' => $term_item));
        }

        //next, get the id of posts with that term in that tax
        foreach ( $terms as $term ) {
            $term_ids[] = $term[0]->term_id;
        }

        $post_ids = get_objects_in_term($term_ids, $wp_query->query_vars['taxonomy']);

        if ( !is_wp_error($post_ids) && count($post_ids) ) {
            // build the new query
            $new_where = " AND wp_posts.ID IN (" . implode(', ', $post_ids) . ") ";
            // re-add any other query vars via concatenation on the $new_where string below here

            // now, sub out the bad where with the good
            $where = str_replace("AND 0", $new_where, $where);
        } else {
            // give up
        }
    }
    return $where;
}

add_filter("posts_where", "multi_tax_terms");
0

It's somehow silly that after implementing custom taxonomies in WP there are no built-in functions to use them at will, and the documentation is close to non-existent. I was looking for a solution, this query solves it (and made my day). Thanks.

Still, sadly I'm too dumb (OOP blind) to make it into a function so I don't repeat it all over. I get: **Fatal error**: Call to a member function get_results() on a non-object

I guess I don't know how to call $wpdb from within a function.

pax
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  • I had to add "global $wpdb;" inside the function. Silly me. Realized it right after posting the above entry. – pax Oct 11 '09 at 23:32
0
 //equivalent to get_posts
 function brand_get_posts($args=array()){
global $wpdb;
$sql = "SELECT p.* ";
$sql.= " FROM $wpdb->posts p";
$sql.= " LEFT JOIN $wpdb->term_relationships term_r ON(p.ID = term_r.object_id)";
$sql.= " LEFT JOIN $wpdb->term_taxonomy term_t ON(term_r.term_taxonomy_id = term_t.term_taxonomy_id)";
$sql.= " LEFT JOIN $wpdb->terms terms ON(term_t.term_id = terms.term_id)";
$sql.= " WHERE 1=1 ";
if(!empty($args['post_type'])){
    $sql.= " AND p.post_type = '".$args['post_type']."'";
}   
$sql.= " AND p.post_status = 'publish'";

if(!empty($args['taxonomy'])){
    $sql.= " AND term_t.taxonomy = '".$args['taxonomy']."'";
}   
if(!empty($args['terms'])&&is_array($args['terms'])){
    $sql.= " AND terms.slug IN ('".implode(",",$args['terms'])."')";
}
$sql.= " ORDER BY p.post_date DESC";
if(!empty($args['posts_per_page'])){
    $sql.=" LIMIT ".$args['posts_per_page'];
}
if(!empty($args['offset'])){
    $sql.=" OFFSET ".$args['offset'];
}
//echo '<h1>'.$sql.'</h1>';
return $wpdb->get_results($sql);
 }
ashraf mohammed
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0

it should be like this:

        global $wp_query;
        query_posts(
                array_merge(
                    array('taxonomy' => 'technologies', 'term' => array('sql', 'php')),
                    $wp_query->query
                )
            );

that works for custom post_types, at least.

0

Hey, I also faced the same problem once. If you don't have many multiple values, then you can do it in the following way, rather than writing a raw SQL query:

$loop = new WP_Query(array('technologies' => 'php','technologies' => 'sql')); 

Then you can loop through the wp_query object created here. Though this is a very old post and am sure you have already solved the problem. :)

Sumeet Chawla
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