That's absolutely correct.
When registering a filter(or basically calling apply_filters
), you should call the function with at least two arguments - name of the filter to be applied and the value to which the filter will be applied.
Any further arguments that you pass to the function will be passed to the filtering functions, but only if they have requested additional arguments. Here's an example:
// Minimal usage for add_filter()
add_filter( 'my_filter', 'my_filtering_function1' );
// We added a priority for our filter - the default priority is 10
add_filter( 'my_filter', 'my_filtering_function2', 11 );
// Full usage of add_filter() - we set a priority for our function and add a number of accepted arguments.
add_filter( 'my_filter', 'my_filtering_function3', 12, 2 );
// Apply our custom filter
apply_filters( 'my_filter', 'content to be filtered', 'argument 2', 'argument 3' );
Given the code above, the content to be filtered
will be passed first to my_filtering_function1
. This function will only receive the content to be filtered
and not the additional arguments.
Then the content will then be passed(after being treated by my_filtering_function1
) to my_filtering_function2
. Again the function will only receive the first argument.
Finally the content will be passed to the my_filtering_function3
function(as it has been changed by the previous two functions). This time the function will be passed 2 arguments instead(since we specified this), but it won't get the argument 3
argument.
See apply_filters()
in source.
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