I have created an html form from scratch and included it by using the Wordpress Shortcode API. The form is a table based on a collection of user data. The collection is a php class. In the constructor of the collection I attempt to register the form 'post' action with
add_action( 'admin_post_my_form_action' function() {
handle_post_data();
}
the form is declared like this:
<form action="' . esc_url( admin_url('admin-post.php') ) . '" method="post">
and has a hidden 'input' field like this:
<input type="hidden" name="action" value="my_form_action">
all should be well...
BUT, the form handler never gets called.
by adding debugging into the __construct() and __destruct() methods i see that the Collection object has a very short lifespan. The collection object is being destroyed before the callback can be called. (this is surprising as presumably wordpress core has a callback handle to it)
I have tried to keep the Collection object alive by declaring it in global scope and by using a singleton pattern with a static instance attribute. Neither approach works.
Is there a nice wordpressy way of keeping state over time?
thanks in anticipation
addendum: When I put the add_action hook outside a function or class, the callback works. This, however, doesn't solve my problem.. I need the Collection object to persist long enough that I can use it in the callback. -J