A normal installation of the WordPress CMS consists of hundreds of scripts, plugins and themes. The concept allows to replace scripts by simply creating a copy of it and put the altered version in the right directory. However, a copied script will not be updated when a new version of the script or plugin is installed. Within a script there are often hundreds of functions. The cost of changing one function is that the other functions will also be no longer updated. In many cases the Wordpress hooks and filters are sufficient to add or suppress specific functionality, but not always.
I'm looking for a way to redeclare or overload a function so that the original script may be replaced by the CMS whenever an update is installed. I tried this:
rename_function( 'wp_function' , 'old_wp_funtion )
function wp_function(){
// things to do before the function
$a = $b;
// call the old function
$result = old_wp_function();
// things to do afterwards
$b = $c;
return $result;
}
But it doesn't work. Also, with Wordpress you never know what kind of and how many arguments to aspect. The overloaded function has to deal with that too.
My question is: how do I go about this to make it work in all cases, with any number and any type of arguments. And without having to change anything to the original function/script because they may (and must) be overwritten by Wordpress updates.
doesn't work
error in php or in any other language. BTW, you have typo (closing'
missing after'old_wp_funtion
).