Take care of this problem, you will change adalo forever

If you want to find a phrase with several words, you must write the phrase in the exact chronological order - otherwise, you will not find anything.

For example:

If you want to find a pizza with pepperoni and you write “pepperoni pizza” - you won’t find anything.

You have to write “pizza with pepperoni” to find what you need; it’s the only way.

This makes searching a large database almost impossible, because you have to search a lot to find what you are looking for.

If you make the search show all results with the words regardless of the order in which the words are written, the search engine will be much better.

This is really a very simple problem to solve.

And in the current situation, this will make anyone who has a large search engine in Adalo consider withdrawing from the platform (and I checked with many people who suffer from the same problem).

Make life easy for us, thanks.

I fell like you can do this already. You need to set the search filter to “contains”. Not equals too.

Devin RosseyIt doesn’t work, it only works if it is written in chronological order.

If there is a word in the middle, it won’t find anything.

For example:

If I write - cold coffee with almond milk

And write almond milk coffee, I won’t find anything.

It does not show all the results with the written words, it depends on the order of the words

You have to set the search filter to “contains”. So for example when I type the Number 4 in the text box it will populate all the data that have a number 4 in it. Same thing with what you’re trying to do. Check photos to see how mine is setup. nadav as you can see the number 4 is in the middle of the business groups name and the list was able to generate data based off of me just entering the number 4 in search box.


Devin Rossey

Right, because you only wrote 4, it only works if you only write one word/in chronological order. If you write cell 4 for example you will not find anything. I have an app with many products and sometimes the user doesn’t write in the right order and he just can’t find anything.

Devin Rossey

Write a phrase with more than one word and you’ll realize it doesn’t work