To make the round trip "The WordPress Way" on the "front-end" (doesn't work in the context of wp-admin
), you need to use 3 WordPress functions:
- add_query_arg() - to create the URL with your new query variable ('c' in your example)
- the query_vars filter - to modify the list of public query variables that WordPress knows about (this only works on the front-end, because the WP Query is not used on the back end -
wp-admin
- so this will also not be available in admin-ajax
)
- get_query_var() - to retrieve the value of your custom query variable passed in your URL.
Note: there's no need to even touch the superglobals ($_GET
) if you do it this way.
Example
On the page where you need to create the link / set the query variable:
if it's a link back to this page, just adding the query variable
<a href="<?php echo esc_url( add_query_arg( 'c', $my_value_for_c ) )?>">
if it's a link to some other page
<a href="<?php echo esc_url(
add_query_arg( 'c', $my_value_for_c, site_url( '/some_other_page/' ) )
)?>">
In your functions.php, or some plugin file or custom class (front-end only):
function add_custom_query_var( $vars ){
$vars[] = "c";
return $vars;
}
add_filter( 'query_vars', 'add_custom_query_var' );
On the page / function where you wish to retrieve and work with the query var set in your URL:
$my_c = get_query_var( 'c' );
On the Back End (wp-admin
)
On the back end we don't ever run wp()
, so the main WP Query does not get run. As a result, there are no query vars
and the query_vars
hook is not run.
In this case, you'll need to revert to the more standard approach of examining your $_GET
superglobal. The best way to do this is probably:
$my_c = filter_input( INPUT_GET, "c", FILTER_SANITIZE_STRING );
though in a pinch you could do the tried and true
$my_c = isset( $_GET['c'] ) ? $_GET['c'] : "";
or some variant thereof.