We'll create fresh WordPress site with Similar Posts Ontology installed. You have 20 minutes to test the plugin after that site we'll be deleted.
Does your website utilize categories and tags? Does it use custom taxonomies? If so, this plugin will find similar content
based on all your taxonomies. There are two ways to show related posts within your page.
The Widget included with this plugin gives you the option to limit the amount of posts; it allows you to determine which
fields to show: Featured Image, Author, Date, and Excerpt (Title is required); it allows you to determine which
variant of the featured image to show: thumbnail, medium, large, or full. As of version 2.0, you can now decide whether the
‘similar posts’ sorting prefers posts that are newer or posts that were created closer to the date of the post you’re
viewing.
If you find the Widget doesn’t meet your needs or is too limiting, you can call the functionality programmatically using
this function:
pk_related_return($post->ID, $args);
Where $post->ID is the ID of the post for which you are wanting to show related articles.
The $args parameter is an array with the following values available to you (more coming soon):
An example might be:
<?php
$args = array (
'posts_per_page' => 6,
'thumbnail_size' => 'medium',
'sort_prefer' => 'closest'
);
The return value of pk_related_return is an array of objects that includes most of the fields within WordPress’s posts
table plus permalink and featured image.
Future Additions:
Allow the user to specify only certain content types (posts, pages, custom) in a request. This would allow you to specify
only products get returned, or only blog posts. This would only be an issue if content types share taxonomies.