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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 |
---|---|
2381 | * Fires after enqueuing block assets for both editor and front-end. |
2382 | * |
2383 | * Call `add_action` on any hook before 'wp_enqueue_scripts'. |
2384 | * |
2385 | * In the function call you supply, simply use `wp_enqueue_script` and |
2386 | * `wp_enqueue_style` to add your functionality to the Gutenberg editor. |
2387 | * |
2388 | * @since 5.0.0 |
2389 | */ |
2390 | do_action( 'enqueue_block_assets' ); |
2391 | } |
2392 |
|
2393 | /** |
2394 | * Applies a filter to the list of style nodes that comes from WP_Theme_JSON::get_style_nodes(). |
2395 | * |
2396 | * This particular filter removes all of the blocks from the array. |
2397 | * |
2398 | * We want WP_Theme_JSON to be ignorant of the implementation details of how the CSS is being used. |
2399 | * This filter allows us to modify the output of WP_Theme_JSON depending on whether or not we are |