WP hooks navigation: Home/browse • Actions index • Filters index
To save our bandwidth, we show only a snippet of code around each occurence of the hook. View complete file in SVN (without highlighting).
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 |
---|---|
2895 | * will be reversed for two actions added at priority 10, resulting in |
2896 | * the core settings no longer being available as expected to themes/plugins. |
2897 | * So the following manually calls the method that registers the core |
2898 | * settings up front before doing the action. |
2899 | */ |
2900 | remove_action( 'customize_register', array( $wp_customize, 'register_controls' ) ); |
2901 | $wp_customize->register_controls(); |
2902 |
|
2903 | /** This filter is documented in /wp-includes/class-wp-customize-manager.php */ |
2904 | do_action( 'customize_register', $wp_customize ); |
2905 | } |
2906 | $wp_customize->_publish_changeset_values( $changeset_post->ID ) ; |
2907 |
|
2908 | /* |
2909 | * Trash the changeset post if revisions are not enabled. Unpublished |
2910 | * changesets by default get garbage collected due to the auto-draft status. |
2911 | * When a changeset post is published, however, it would no longer get cleaned |
2912 | * out. Ths is a problem when the changeset posts are never displayed anywhere, |
2913 | * since they would just be endlessly piling up. So here we use the revisions |