A plugin in WordPress.org repository;
<?php
/*
Plugin Name: Health Check
Plugin URI: https://wordpress.org/plugins/health-check/
Description: Checks the health of your WordPress install
Version: 0.1.0
Author: The Health Check Team
Author URI: http://health-check-team.example.com
Text Domain: health-check
Domain Path: /languages
*/
?>
MVC
Event-driven
images by Tom McFarlin
Actions are points in the WordPress lifecycle that allow you to add, remove, or modify certain functionality.
- Tom McFarlin
You, as a developer, can hook a custom function to be executed at that particular point.
<?php add_action( 'wp_head', 'my_function' ); ?>
This line will execute my_function when WordPress is printing it's code in the <head> part of HTML document.
<?php
add_action( 'wp_head', 'my_function' );
function my_function() {
echo '<!-- hello! -->';
}
?>
The above code will print a '<!-- hello! -->' comment in the <head> part of any WordPress website.
Filters, on the other hand, are points in the WordPress lifecycle in which you can add, remove, or modify data.
- Tom McFarlin
You, as a developer, can hook a custom function to modify that piece of data.
<?php add_action( 'the_title', 'title_filter' ); ?>
This line will make WordPress to pass article title to title_filter function and use the return value whenever WordPress prints an article title.
<?php
add_filter( 'the_title', 'title_filter' );
function title_filter( $title ) {
$title = $title . ' :)';
return $title;
}
?>
The above code will make WordPress display a ':)' at the end of every post/page/menu item title.
<?php
add_filter( 'the_title', 'function_1', 10 );
add_filter( 'the_title', 'function_2', 9 );
add_filter( 'the_title', 'function_3', 90 );
?>
Functions will be executed in this order: function_2, function_1, function_3
<?php
add_filter( 'the_title', 'function_1', 10, 2 );
add_filter( 'the_title', 'function_2', 10, 1 );
add_filter( 'the_title', 'function_3', 10 );
?>
function_1 will receive 2 arguments (post title and post ID), while function_2 and function_3 will only get post title.
Note: filter functions will always receive one argument.
Short answer - everywhere :)
Long answer - there are around 2000 different action/filter hooks in current WordPress codebase (and growing with every version).
And if lists fail You, You can always just look at the relevant part in WordPress code.
An awesome plugin by John Blackbourn
Top Menu > Hooks
Main action hooks in their execution order;
Together with all the functions that are attached to those hooks;
You can also add hooks to Your own code, to make it extendable and/or leverage features of other plugins or WordPress Core.
<?php
// trigger `wp_head` action
do_action( 'wp_head' );
// trigger `the_title` filter
$title = apply_filters( 'the_title', $title, $post_id );
?>
Finally, You can also create Your own custom hooks, specific to Your code. Just use Your own hook name.
<?php
// trigger `arunas_action` action
do_action( 'arunas_action' );
// trigger `arunas_filter` filter
$data = apply_filters( 'arunas_filter', $data );
?>