5

I have a Wordpress page with the title "Paper 10x10". In my sidebar navigation this page is displayed as "Paper 10×10" (note that the x is texturized by Wordpress and therefor the x became a multiplication sign ×).

I have the plugin raw html plugin installed. It only disables wptexturizing for the_content. But the navigation is not in the_content but in get_sidebar().

I tried remove_filter:

remove_filter('the_content', 'wptexturize');
remove_filter('the_excerpt', 'wptexturize');

But this also only disables texturizing for the content or the excerpt.

How can I disable the wptexturize filter globally in my Wordpress blog?

3 Answers 3

14

You can disable it globally with the run_wptexturize filter, as detailed here:

add_filter( 'run_wptexturize', '__return_false' );

2
  • 1
    This is the only way to make sure a plugin doesn't inadvertently turn the wptexturize filter back on, and it disables the filter globally.
    – JJJ
    Aug 7, 2015 at 13:35
  • Wow! As far as I can tell this is way better than the other solutions.
    – elpoto
    Sep 1, 2017 at 9:06
5

Try:

remove_filter('the_title', 'wptexturize');
1
  • thanks, that did the trick. stupid me. embarrassing i didn't try it beforehand. sorry for your time guys and thanks again windyjonas!
    – Max
    Jul 25, 2010 at 21:15
4

I went to /wp-includes/default-filters.php and looked for everything affected by wptexturize, and did a foreach in the same style default-filters.php uses to add filters.

Your problem seems to have been solved, but others might eventually want the complete purge, so I'm posting it here, it being the first question to come up when searching for wptexturize:

$filters_to_remove = array(
  'comment_author', 'term_name', 'link_name', 'link_description', 'link_notes', 'bloginfo', 'wp_title', 'widget_title',
  'single_post_title', 'single_cat_title', 'single_tag_title', 'single_month_title', 'nav_menu_attr_title', 'nav_menu_description',
  'term_description',
  'the_title', 'the_content', 'the_excerpt', 'comment_text', 'list_cats'
);

foreach ($filters_to_remove as $a_filter){
  remove_filter($a_filter, 'wptexturize');
}
5
  • Does this cause an issue if one of the filters does not exist? Will it cause a php error? I'm concerned if a filter disappears in an update. Also this is not stopping wp from adding double quotes around text in my paragraph tags. Is there another filter for that?
    – isimmons
    Jun 22, 2013 at 22:54
  • Never mind about the quotes. That was chrome devtools. But I still wonder if in the foreach there should be a check to make sure the filter exists. Just not sure at the moment how to do that.
    – isimmons
    Jun 22, 2013 at 23:06
  • 1
    On the documentation on remove_filter, it says it just returns false on failure, so no ugly php warnings everywhere on your site after a WordPress update.You can see it here: codex.wordpress.org/Function_Reference/remove_filter and here, lines 240 to 273: core.trac.wordpress.org/browser/tags/3.5.2/wp-includes/…
    – Pabbles
    Jun 24, 2013 at 0:40
  • I see that. No warning on failure. And if something doesn't get remove then we know it got added at some point after the removal and know what to look for. Putting this at the end of functions.php should work in most cases. I would have chosen this as the answer since it actually answers the question in the title. Thanks Pabbles
    – isimmons
    Jun 24, 2013 at 3:33
  • 1
    You're welcome ^_^ I kind of came in three years late with my answer, though, maybe those functions worked differently back then :P
    – Pabbles
    Jun 24, 2013 at 19:23

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