• Home
  • About Mitch
  • Speaking
  • Articles
  • Contact
  • Home
  • About Mitch
  • Speaking
  • Articles
  • Contact

Digital Strategist

WordPress Developer

Content Creator

Unapologetic Punk

Mitch Canter

  • X
  • Bluesky
  • GitHub
  • Twitch
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
Development

How To Search A Specific Custom Post Type (Only!) in WordPress

CMDR Mitchcraft

Reading time: 1 minute

If you’re like me, you use custom post types a LOT when you’re doing projects (or on your own site, if I’ve done it for you!).  There’s a lot of value in having a type of content that’s unrestrained and flexible.  Sometimes, however, you want to be able to search a particular post type, and leave out all of the other results (pages, blog posts, etc).  Here’s a handy snippet that will let you do just that (for example, a ‘products’ post type):

<form method="get" id="searchform" action="<?php bloginfo('home'); ?>/">
<input type="text" placeholder="Search" name="s" id="s" />
<input type="hidden" name="post_type" value="products" />
<input type="hidden" id="searchsubmit" />
</form>

Line 3 is the key – it’s a hidden field that defines the “post_type” as whatever value you have there (the query variable, not the name mind you).

As an added bonus, this particular search button clears the default text on click so as not to have an awkward empty search box when you first access it.

Add this into any template and you’ve got yourself a laser-specific search box for your custom post needs.

code snippit, custom post type, search, WordPress
  • How to Make a Royally Awesome Author Template in WordPress

    How to Make a Royally Awesome Author Template in WordPress

    Reading time: 7 minutes

    I’ve been trying some new stuff with my client’s websites as of late.  I wanted something where a multi-blog site could get the most out of as few plugins as possible, and still have a really awesome way to display their author’s main information.  But, the information they ask for doesn’t have everything.  What about…

    Tutorial, WordPress
  • Things I Learned from #wcatl (and a Few I Learned on My Own)

    Things I Learned from #wcatl (and a Few I Learned on My Own)

    Reading time: 1 minute

    View more documents from Jane Wells. 2. The PHP and WordPress communities can learn a lot from each other. @technosailor gave a fantastic presentation (re: lecture in a discussion-y way) on how the core communities of both the PHP world and the WordPress world could stand to play nicer to each other.  Personally, I think…

    WordPress