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The best way to understand what a hook does is to look at where it occurs in the source code.
do_action( "hook_name" )apply_filters( "hook_name", "what_to_filter" ).Remember, this hook may occur in more than one file. Moreover, the hook's context may change from version to version.
| Line | Code | 
|---|---|
| 5543 |                 * (256 megabytes of memory) or the original `memory_limit` php.ini value if | 
| 5544 |                 * this is higher. | 
| 5545 |                 * | 
| 5546 |                 * @since 3.0.0 | 
| 5547 |                 * @since 4.6.0 The default now takes the original `memory_limit` into account. | 
| 5548 |                 * | 
| 5549 |                 * @param int|string $filtered_limit The maximum WordPress memory limit. Accepts an integer | 
| 5550 |                 *                                   (bytes), or a shorthand string notation, such as '256M'. | 
| 5551 |                 */ | 
| 5552 |                $filtered_limit = apply_filters( 'admin_memory_limit', $filtered_limit ); | 
| 5553 |                break; | 
| 5554 |  | 
| 5555 |           case 'image': | 
| 5556 |                /** | 
| 5557 |                 * Filters the memory limit allocated for image manipulation. | 
| 5558 |                 * | 
| 5559 |                 * @since 3.5.0 | 
| 5560 |                 * @since 4.6.0 The default now takes the original `memory_limit` into account. | 
| 5561 |                 * |