I have the following MySQL query:
SELECT title, description
FROM some_table
WHERE MATCH (title,description) AGAINST ('+denver (REGEXP "[[:<:]]colorado[s]*[[:>:]]")' IN BOOLEAN MODE);
the "regexp" here looks for a "complete word" colorado (with or without the ending "s").
I want to actually select only those rows that have ("denver") AND ("colorado" or "colorados"). But I cannot put a "+" for the REGEXP. I tried but got 0 results, although there are rows in the table that match the requirement.
Any ideas on how I can get the "+" to work within against using a REGEXP? I am constructing this from within a PHP script where "denver" and "colorado" are values of variables I use to construct the select statement.
My PHP/MySQL script would look somewhat like this:
SELECT title, description
FROM some_table
WHERE MATCH (title,description) AGAINST ('+$var1 (REGEXP "[[:<:]]$var2[s]*[[:>:]]")' IN BOOLEAN MODE);
I don't think it's possible to combine regular expressions and MATCH ... IN BOOLEAN MODE. You need to use the syntax for writing boolean expressions.
Try something like this:
SELECT title, description
FROM some_table
WHERE MATCH (title,description)
AGAINST ('+denver +(colorado colorados)' IN BOOLEAN MODE);