I tried to send data from my js to a php function via wp_ajax. All the data is being sent correctly as I can echo it back.
However, now I need to pass the results to another add_action hook. What is the best way to do this? What i'm doing isn't working.
Here's what I have so far:
My ajax send:
jQuery.ajax({
type: 'post',
url: customizerValues.ajax_url,
data: {
action: 'ar_update_plan',
nonce: wpApiSettings.nonce,
plan_id: planId,
blog_id: site_id,
},
success: function(response) {
console.log(response);
}
});
My php function
add_action( 'wp_ajax_ar_update_plan', 'ar_update_plan' );
function ar_update_plan($blog_id, $new_expire, $level){
if( isset($_REQUEST['blog_id'])) {
$blog_id = $_REQUEST['blog_id'];
if( isset($_REQUEST['plan_id'])) {
$level = $_REQUEST['plan_id'];
// THE HOOK I NEED TO PASS THE RESULTS TO
add_action('psts_extend', $blog_id, $new_expire, $new_plan_id);
// just making sure the ajax data came through
echo $_REQUEST['plan_id'];
wp_die(); // ajax call must die to avoid trailing 0 in your response
}
}
}
I tried to send data from my js to a php function via wp_ajax. All the data is being sent correctly as I can echo it back.
However, now I need to pass the results to another add_action hook. What is the best way to do this? What i'm doing isn't working.
Here's what I have so far:
My ajax send:
jQuery.ajax({
type: 'post',
url: customizerValues.ajax_url,
data: {
action: 'ar_update_plan',
nonce: wpApiSettings.nonce,
plan_id: planId,
blog_id: site_id,
},
success: function(response) {
console.log(response);
}
});
My php function
add_action( 'wp_ajax_ar_update_plan', 'ar_update_plan' );
function ar_update_plan($blog_id, $new_expire, $level){
if( isset($_REQUEST['blog_id'])) {
$blog_id = $_REQUEST['blog_id'];
if( isset($_REQUEST['plan_id'])) {
$level = $_REQUEST['plan_id'];
// THE HOOK I NEED TO PASS THE RESULTS TO
add_action('psts_extend', $blog_id, $new_expire, $new_plan_id);
// just making sure the ajax data came through
echo $_REQUEST['plan_id'];
wp_die(); // ajax call must die to avoid trailing 0 in your response
}
}
}
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asked Sep 23, 2016 at 20:31
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1 Answer
Reset to default 3I guess you have a small misunderstanding here (a slight inconsistency only) add_action
is to register a callback for a hook-name, you actually want to fire that hook (not register it).
You can fire a hook with the do_action
function.
The Codex-page of the add_action
function outlines both:
- https://developer.wordpress/reference/functions/add_action/
And naturally the do_action
Codex-page has all the glory details:
- https://developer.wordpress/reference/functions/do_action/
Take care you don't create an endless loop, that will crash PHP and therefore Wordpress but it also shows that there are no limitations built in.
You can stack as many actions as you want to, even recursive action calls are possible.