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 |
|---|---|
| 3089 | * |
| 3090 | * @since 2.1.0 |
| 3091 | * @since 4.4.0 Added the `$errors` parameter. |
| 3092 | * @since 5.4.0 Added the `$user_data` parameter. |
| 3093 | * |
| 3094 | * @param WP_Error $errors A WP_Error object containing any errors generated |
| 3095 | * by using invalid credentials. |
| 3096 | * @param WP_User|false $user_data WP_User object if found, false if the user does not exist. |
| 3097 | */ |
| 3098 | do_action( 'lostpassword_post', $errors, $user_data ); |
| 3099 | |
| 3100 | /** |
| 3101 | * Filters the errors encountered on a password reset request. |
| 3102 | * |
| 3103 | * The filtered WP_Error object may, for example, contain errors for an invalid |
| 3104 | * username or email address. A WP_Error object should always be returned, |
| 3105 | * but may or may not contain errors. |
| 3106 | * |
| 3107 | * If any errors are present in $errors, this will abort the password reset request. |