I've got something similar in our code, and it's working fine (even encoded as &
). I suspect your problem is that it's being double-encoded, as you already have &
. Trying changing it to:
$gmaps_url = 'http://maps.googleapis.com/maps/api/js?key=' . $key . '&sensor=false';
For what it's worth, our (working) code is:
wp_register_script('googlemaps', 'http://maps.googleapis.com/maps/api/js?' . $locale . '&key=' . GOOGLE_MAPS_V3_API_KEY . '&sensor=false', false, '3');
wp_enqueue_script('googlemaps');
($locale
in this case is set to hl=en
)
Edit
Looks like the behaviour's changed in the latest version of WordPress - the above doesn't work (but I'll leave it for people on legacy versions). The only alternative I can see to echoing the script is to add a clean_url
filter, something like this:
add_filter('clean_url', 'so_handle_038', 99, 3);
function so_handle_038($url, $original_url, $_context) {
if (strstr($url, "googleapis.com") !== false) {
$url = str_replace("&", "&", $url); // or $url = $original_url
}
return $url;
}
Pretty ugly, but perhaps marginally better than echoing the script, as it'll still use the WordPress dependency management.
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