4

This has me stumped for a while already. Either I am missing something very obvious or something very not obvious. I am also not entirely sure if this has something to do with WP or purely PHP mechanics at work.

function test() {

    global $wp_query;

    var_dump($wp_query == $GLOBALS['wp_query']);
}

function test2() {

    global $wp_query;

    query_posts(array('posts_per_page' => 1));
    var_dump($wp_query == $GLOBALS['wp_query']);
}

test();
test2();

Result:

boolean true

boolean false

Why does test() evaluates that to true, but test2() evaluates that to false?

2 Answers 2

4

Update with a better example

header( 'Content-Type: text/plain;charset=utf-8' );
error_reporting( E_ALL | E_STRICT );

function failed_unset()
{   // Copy the variable to the local namespace.
    global $foo;

    // Change the value.
    $foo = 2;

    // Remove the variable.
    unset ( $foo );
}
function successful_unset()
{
    // Remove the global variable
    unset ( $GLOBALS['foo'] );
}

$foo = 1;
print "Original: $foo\n";
failed_unset();
print "After failed_unset(): $foo\n";
successful_unset();
print "After successful_unset(): $foo\n";

Result

Original: 1
After failed_unset(): 2

Notice: Undefined variable: foo in /srv/www/htdocs/global-unset.php on line 21

Call Stack:
    0.0004     318712   1. {main}() /srv/www/htdocs/global-unset.php:0

After successful_unset():

unset() doesn’t know anything about the global scope in the first function; the variable was just copied to the local namespace.


Old answer

From wp-includes/query.php:

function &query_posts($query) {
    unset($GLOBALS['wp_query']);
    $GLOBALS['wp_query'] =& new WP_Query();
    return $GLOBALS['wp_query']->query($query);
}

Do you see it?

BTW: Someone has made a nice flowchart about this very topic. ;)

Update

query_posts() changes $GLOBALS while all references to the variable $wp_query that you made available per global are not affected by unset. That’s one reason to prefer $GLOBALS (besides readability).

8
  • Yes, I understand (enough to draw a flowchart) that content of global variable changes. But this doesn't explain why in second function it is different content while accessing essentially same global variable in two different ways?..
    – Rarst
    Apr 2, 2011 at 19:52
  • @Rarst I added a note about the behavior of unset.
    – fuxia
    Apr 2, 2011 at 20:57
  • Still not getting it... The idea is that for same name global variable and member of $GLOBALS array point to the same thing... Or do they not? Per docs unsetting $GLOBALS unsets global variable, so why it isn't either unset or updated to new value assigned?
    – Rarst
    Apr 2, 2011 at 21:07
  • Because the scope of unset is not global. It cannot delete a symbol in your function’s scope. This is not very intuitive and a very common question.
    – fuxia
    Apr 2, 2011 at 21:43
  • Yes, but query_posts() clearly does delete and change the global variable. Then what the heck $wp_query in function continues to point to? It cannot (?) be value in local scope, because there never was such value in local scope.
    – Rarst
    Apr 2, 2011 at 21:47
0

Have you tried using wp_reset_query(); after your custom query as described at http://codex.wordpress.org/Function_Reference/query_posts ?

1
  • 2
    My problem is not after custom query, it is inside custom query. Essentially $wp_query, that was declared global in function, no longer point to correct object after that object was unset and re-set by another function. As per comment discussion with toscho under his answer this seems to be some peculiar behavior of PHP rather than WP.
    – Rarst
    Apr 3, 2011 at 15:04

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