I want to limit the search by keywords to only search for exact word not a phrase or mixed content, so if I search for cheese
it needs to be limited only for word cheese
, and right now it will also return content with the word cheeseburger
.
The part of the search query in my modified template query is right here:
if ( ! function_exists( 'get_job_listings' ) ) :
if ( 'top_rating' === $args['orderby'] ) {
$query_args['meta_query'] = [
'relation' => 'OR',
[
'key' => 'rating',
'compare' => 'EXISTS',
],
[
'key' => 'rating',
'compare' => 'NOT EXISTS',
],
];
$query_args['orderby'] = [
'meta_value_num' => 'DESC',
'comment_count' => 'DESC',
];
}
$job_manager_keyword = sanitize_text_field( $args['search_keywords'] );
if ( ! empty( $job_manager_keyword ) && strlen( $job_manager_keyword ) >= apply_filters( 'job_manager_get_listings_keyword_length_threshold', 2 ) ) {
$search_query = $job_manager_keyword;
$query_args['s'] = $search_query;
// $query_args['s'] = '"' . $search_query . '"';
// $query_args['s'] = '/\b' . preg_quote($search_query, '/') . '\b/';
$query_args['sentence'] = true;
add_filter( 'posts_search', 'get_job_listings_keyword_search' );
}
$query_args = apply_filters( 'job_manager_get_listings', $query_args, $args );
if ( empty( $query_args['meta_query'] ) ) {
unset( $query_args['meta_query'] );
}
if ( empty( $query_args['tax_query'] ) ) {
unset( $query_args['tax_query'] );
}
/** This filter is documented in wp-job-manager.php */
$query_args['lang'] = apply_filters( 'wpjm_lang', null );
// Filter args.
$query_args = apply_filters( 'get_job_listings_query_args', $query_args, $args );
do_action( 'before_get_job_listings', $query_args, $args );
// Cache results.
if ( apply_filters( 'get_job_listings_cache_results', true ) ) {
$to_hash = wp_json_encode( $query_args );
$query_args_hash = 'jm_' . md5( $to_hash . JOB_MANAGER_VERSION ) . WP_Job_Manager_Cache_Helper::get_transient_version( 'get_job_listings' );
$result = false;
$cached_query_results = true;
$cached_query_posts = get_transient( $query_args_hash );
if ( is_string( $cached_query_posts ) ) {
$cached_query_posts = json_decode( $cached_query_posts, false );
if (
$cached_query_posts
&& is_object( $cached_query_posts )
&& isset( $cached_query_posts->max_num_pages )
&& isset( $cached_query_posts->found_posts )
&& isset( $cached_query_posts->posts )
&& is_array( $cached_query_posts->posts )
) {
if ( in_array( $query_args['fields'], [ 'ids', 'id=>parent' ], true ) ) {
// For these special requests, just return the array of results as set.
$posts = $cached_query_posts->posts;
} else {
$posts = array_map( 'get_post', $cached_query_posts->posts );
}
$result = new WP_Query();
$result->parse_query( $query_args );
$result->posts = $posts;
$result->found_posts = intval( $cached_query_posts->found_posts );
$result->max_num_pages = intval( $cached_query_posts->max_num_pages );
$result->post_count = count( $posts );
}
}
if ( false === $result ) {
$result = new WP_Query( $query_args );
$cached_query_results = false;
$cacheable_result = [];
$cacheable_result['posts'] = array_values( $result->posts );
$cacheable_result['found_posts'] = $result->found_posts;
$cacheable_result['max_num_pages'] = $result->max_num_pages;
set_transient( $query_args_hash, wp_json_encode( $cacheable_result ), DAY_IN_SECONDS );
}
if ( $cached_query_results ) {
// random order is cached so shuffle them.
if ( 'rand_featured' === $args['orderby'] ) {
usort( $result->posts, '_wpjm_shuffle_featured_post_results_helper' );
} elseif ( 'rand' === $args['orderby'] ) {
shuffle( $result->posts );
}
}
} else {
$result = new WP_Query( $query_args );
}
do_action( 'after_get_job_listings', $query_args, $args );
//remove_filter( 'posts_search', 'get_job_listings_keyword_search' );
return $result;
}
endif;
I can see that $query_args['s']
is a standard query for search keywords, but some standard query modifications I've tried are like these examples:
And there are other examples too, but none of them are working for me.
How can I modify it, so it can search only for the exact word in content?
I see this question has been posted multiple times, but all of the examples I've tried are not working.