I'm using WordPress, but this question is more pertaining to the SQL involved. I'll gladly move it if I need to.
I'm working on http://www.libertyguide.com/jobs and I'm trying to alter the filtering mechanics. Currently it's a global OR query.
Anyways, I have three filtering lists, and I'm storing what's selected into three strings (interests, type, experience) in the following way:
"( $wpdb->terms.slug = 'webdevelopment' OR $wpdb->terms.slug = 'journalism' OR ... ) AND"
It's populated by whatever is selected in my filtering lists.
When it comes down to it, I have this as a basic query (I'm leaving out the LEFT JOINS):
Before:
SELECT * FROM $wpdb->posts WHERE ($wpdb->terms.slug = 'fromlist1'
OR $wpdb->terms.slug = 'fromlist2' OR $wpdb->terms.slug = 'fromlist3')
AND $wpdb->term_taxonomy.taxonomy = 'jobtype'...
After:
SELECT * FROM $wpdb->posts WHERE
($wpdb->terms.slug = 'fromlist1' OR $wpdb->terms.slug = 'fromlist1again')
AND ($wpdb->terms.slug = 'fromlist2' OR $wpdb->terms.slug = 'fromlist2again')
AND ($wpdb->terms.slug = 'fromlist3' OR $wpdb->terms.slug = 'fromlist3again')
AND $wpdb->term_taxonomy.taxonomy = 'jobtype'...
So essentially I want to go from an
OR filter
to
an AND filter with OR filtering inbetween.
My new filtering only works when one item overall is selected, but returns nothing when I select more than one thing (that I know would match up with a few posts).
I've thought through the logic and I don't see anything wrong with it. I know nothing is wrong with anything else, so it has to be the query itself.
Any step in the right direction would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!
UPDATE From the confusion, basically I have this:
"SELECT ...... WHERE $terms ..."
but I WANT
"SELECT ....... WHERE $interests AND $type AND $experience"
I don't want to have it filter $interest[1] OR $interest[2] OR $type[1] OR $experience[1], but instead want it to filter ($interest[1] OR $interest[2]) AND ($type[1]) AND ($experience[1])
I hope this makes more sense
*UPDATE 2*
Here's and example:
In my interests list, I select for example three things: WebDevelopment, Academia, Journalism.
In my type list, I choose two things: Fulltime, Parttime
In my experience list, I choose three things: Earlycareer, Midcareer, Latecareer.
When I run my query, I want to make sure that each record has AT LEAST one of each of the three lists. Possible Results: (WebDevelopment, Parttime, Midcareer), (Academia, Fulltime, Earlycareer, Midcareer).
NOT A RESULT: (Journalism, Earlycareer) - missing fulltime or parttime
I really hope this clears it up more. I'm willing to give compensation if I can get this working correctly.
WPsyntax that I know is throwing me off and might be throwing others off. Can you give a sample list of$interest[1,$interest[2],$type[1],$experience[1]and then show which rows you are expecting/wanting the modified query to return? As far as I can tell, you're saying it has to show up in bothexperienceandtypeand at least 1 of theinterestlists, is that right? If so, is the issue with making WP do it? – Anthony Apr 25 '12 at 17:33