WordCamp Portland 2011 September 17, 2011
Andrew Nacin Core Developer of WordPress Tech Ninja at Audrey Capital
[email protected] @nacin on Twitter
You Don't Know Query
What do you know?
Conditional Tags
is_author( ), is_home( ), etc.
Who has ever heard of query_posts( )?
Ways to query
query_posts( ) new WP_Query( ) get_posts( )
The loop
if ( have_posts( ) ) while ( have_posts( ) ) : the_post( );
endwhile( );
What don't you know?
Every query object has its own methods
is_author( ) is the same as calling $wp_query->is_author( )
function is_author( ) { global $wp_query;
return $wp_query->is_author( );
}
If you do: $my_query = new WP_Query( $query ); You can do: while ( $my_query->have_posts( ) ) : $my_query->the_post( ); endwhile; wp_reset_postdata( );
But why do we call things like wp_reset_postdata( ) and wp_reset_query( )? What about using query_posts( )? How can you alter a query? What about the main query?
What is the main query, and why should I care?
Let's dig in.
wp-blog-header.php // Load the WordPress bootstrap require dirname( __FILE__ ) . '/wp-load.php'; // Do magic wp(); // Decide which template files to load ABSPATH . WPINC . '/template-loader.php';
Let's look in the bootstrap: $wp_the_query = new WP_Query(); $wp_query =& $wp_the_query;
Quick lesson on PHP references
$a = 4; $b =& $a; $b = 2; var_dump( $a ); // int(2) $a = 6; var_dump( $b ); // int(6)
So: So the real main query is in $wp_the_query. And a live copy of it is stored in $wp_query.
wp-blog-header.php // Load the WordPress bootstrap require dirname( __FILE__ ) . '/wp-load.php'; // Do magic wp(); // Decide which template files to load ABSPATH . WPINC . '/template-loader.php';
wp-blog-header.php // Load the WordPress bootstrap require dirname( __FILE__ ) . '/wp-load.php'; // Do magic wp( ); // Decide which template files to load ABSPATH . WPINC . '/template-loader.php';
What is that wp( ) call?
function wp( $query_vars = '' ) { global $wp;
$wp->main( $query_vars );
}
Holy $!@?, what just happened?
In the bootstrap:
$wp = new WP( ); So there's a wp( ) function, and a WP class.
class WP { . . . function main( ) { $this->init( ); $this->parse_request( ); $this->send_headers( ); $this->query_posts( ); $this->handle_404( ); $this->register_globals( ); . . .
class WP { . . . function main( ) { $this->init( ); $this->parse_request( ); $this->send_headers( ); $this->query_posts( ); $this->handle_404( ); $this->register_globals( ); . . .
WP::parse_request( ) — Parses the URL using WP_Rewrite — Sets up query variables for WP_Query WP::query_posts( ) {
global $wp_the_query; $wp_the_query->query( $this->query_vars );
}
Boom. SELECT SQL_CALC_FOUND_ROWS
wp_posts.* FROM wp_posts WHERE 1=1
AND wp_posts.post_type = 'post' AND wp_posts.post_status = 'publish'
ORDER BY wp_posts.post_date DESC LIMIT 0, 10
wp-blog-header.php
// Load WordPress. require dirname(__FILE__) . '/wp-load.php'; // Parse what to query, and query it. wp(); // Load the theme. ABSPATH . WPINC . '/template-loader.php';
Before we get to the theme, we have your posts.
Got it?
Then why do we do this?
query_posts( 'author=5' ); get_header( ); while( have_posts( ) ) : the_post( ); endwhile; get_footer( );
That's running 2* queries! One, the query WordPress thought we wanted. Two, this new one you're actually going to use.
* Actually, WP_Query doesn't run just one query. It usually runs four.
1. Get me my posts: SELECT SQL_CALC_FOUND_ROWS … FROM wp_posts LIMIT 0, 10
2. How many posts exist? SELECT FOUND_ROWS()
3. Slurp all metadata for these posts. 4. Slurp all terms for these posts.
PROTIP ‘Measure twice, cut once’ is bad for performance.
(A note, you can turn these off selectively…)
$my_query = new WP_Query( array( 'no_found_rows' => true, 'update_post_meta_cache' => false, 'update_post_term_cache' => false,
) );
So. Instead of this:
query_posts( 'author=5' ); get_header( ); while ( have_posts( ) ) : the_post( ); endwhile; get_footer( );
We can use this:
// In WP::parse_request() $this->query_vars =
apply_filters( 'request', $this->query_vars );
We can modify query variables in mid air:
function nacin_filter_out_author( $qvs ) { if ( ! isset( $qvs['author'] ) ) $qvs['author'] = '-5'; return $qvs;
}
Powerful, but lacks context.
Powerful, but lacks context.
Problem 1: Conditional tags don't work yet.
Powerful, but lacks context.
Problem 1: Conditional tags don't work yet. Problem 2: Only works on the main query.
Powerful, but lacks context.
Problem 1: Conditional tags don't work yet. Problem 2: Only works on the main query. Problem 3: WP_Query is waaay cooler.
Introducing pre_get_posts class WP_Query {
. . . function &get_posts() { $this->parse_query(); // Huzzah! Conditional tags are available. do_action_ref_array( 'pre_get_posts', array( &$this ) ); . . .
A truly awesome hook. function nacin_alter_home( $query ) {
if ( $query->is_home( ) ) $query->set( 'author', '-5' );
} add_action( 'pre_get_posts', 'nacin_alter_home' );
Still with us?
Good, ‘cause here’s where things get hairy.
'request' fires for the main query only. 'pre_get_posts' fires for every post query: — get_posts() — new WP_Query() — That random recent posts widget. — Everything.
What if I just want it on the main query?
$wp_the_query makes a triumphant return.
Main query only!
function nacin_alter_home ( $query ) { if ( $wp_the_query === $query && $query->is_home() ) $query->set( 'author', '-5' );
} add_action( 'pre_get_posts', 'nacin_alter_home' );
Hmm. How does this work? $wp_the_query should never be modified. It holds the main query, forever. $wp_query keeps a live reference to $wp_the_query, unless you use query_posts().
query_posts( 'author=-5' ); while ( have_posts( ) ) :
the_post( ); endwhile; wp_reset_query( );
query_posts( 'author=-5' ); while ( have_posts( ) ) :
the_post( ); endwhile; wp_reset_query( );
class WP_Query { . . . function &query_posts( $query ) { // Break the reference to $wp_the_query unset( $wp_query ); $wp_query =& new WP_Query( $query ); . . .
query_posts( 'author=-5' ); while ( have_posts( ) ) :
the_post( ); endwhile; wp_reset_query( );
class WP_Query { . . . function wp_reset_query( ) { // Restore the reference to
$wp_the_query unset( $wp_query ); $wp_query =& $wp_the_query;
// Reset the globals, too. wp_reset_postdata( ); . . .
Calling the_post( )? wp_reset_query( ) will reset $wp_query and and the globals.
Calling $my_query->the_post( )?
wp_reset_postdata( ) will reset the globals.
New thing for core in 3.3!
Rather than: $wp_the_query === $other_query_object
You'll be able to call:
$other_query_object->is_main_query( ) is_main_query( ), the function, will act on $wp_query, like any other conditional tag.
Some Lessons
Every WP_Query object has methods that mimic the global conditional tags. The global conditional tags apply to $wp_query, the main or current query. $wp_query is always the main query, unless you use query_posts( ). Restore it with wp_reset_query( ).
request is a nice hook. pre_get_posts is more powerful and flexible. Just use it properly. Always check if you're modifying the main query using $query === $wp_the_query $query->is_main_query( ) in 3.3!
And Finally
Thanks! Questions?
@nacin
Recommended