1

I can't seem to get drafts to show up with WP_Query, even when post_status is set to 'any' or 'draft'

        $args = array(
                    'p' => 1234, 
                    'post_type' => 'any',
                    'post_status' => 'any'
                    );
        $query = new WP_Query( $args );

        while ( $query->have_posts() ) : $query->the_post();
            // display the post
        endwhile;

        wp_reset_postdata();

If I go back and Publish post 1234, WP_Query grabs it just fine. But when it is a draft, neither any nor draft grabs it.

I read that the exclude_from_search parameter in register_post_type() prevents posts from showing up with WP_Query, so I set it to false in the post_type I am grabbing from, like so:

$args = array(
    'labels' => $labels,
    'description' => '',
    'public' => true,
    'publicly_queryable' => true,
    'exclude_from_search' => false,
    'show_ui' => true,
    'menu_position' => 60,
    'menu_icon' => null,
    'capability_type' => post,
    'hierarchical' => false,
    'supports' => array('title', 'editor', 'author', 'excerpt', 'trackbacks', 'custom-fields', 'revisions'),
    'rewrite' => true,
    'query_var' => true,
    'can_export' => true,
    'show_in_nav_menus' => true,
);

register_post_type('chart', $args);

Is there something I'm overlooking here? I don't see why a draft post in this post type wouldn't show up in the query above.

6
  • what do you get if you print_r( $query )? I wonder if have_posts() or the_post() is preventing drafts from showing up...
    – mor7ifer
    Commented Feb 16, 2012 at 1:57
  • Here's the result of printing the query: pastebin.com/MpZK2vPf
    – supertrue
    Commented Feb 16, 2012 at 7:15
  • And that's a print_r() on $query?!? It looks like it's not querying...see my answer.
    – mor7ifer
    Commented Feb 16, 2012 at 10:35
  • Have you tried swapping p with post__in?
    – mrwweb
    Commented May 23, 2012 at 16:59
  • Your query-- the first one in your question-- works for me with a couple of different post types. I suspect that you have a plugin or something in your theme that is manipulating your queries in a way that is breaking this one. Disable your plugins and switch to the default theme and see what happens.
    – s_ha_dum
    Commented Nov 4, 2012 at 15:43

3 Answers 3

6

Try passing it as an array.

For example

$args = array(
    'p' => 1234, 
    'post_type' => 'any',
    'post_status' => array('draft')
);

Or for all types

$args = array(
    'p' => 1234, 
    'post_type' => 'any',
    'post_status' => array('publish', 'pending', 'draft', 'auto-draft', 'future', 'private', 'inherit', 'trash')
);
3
  • Unfortunately that didn't work. According to the codex and trac, post_status should accept a string, array, or comma-separated string equally well.
    – supertrue
    Commented Feb 16, 2012 at 0:55
  • I can confirm that this worked for me, when I need to get pending and drafts. Thanks Commented Dec 10, 2012 at 22:32
  • I just did a test with 4.7.2 with the 'post_type' as an array of 'any', and a text string of 'any' [so 'post_type' => array('any') 'post_type' => 'any' ] and both parameters were able to get draft posts Commented Feb 16, 2017 at 22:49
2

I just came across this exact scenario. In my opinion it should work, but when I tried a combination of 'p' => 123 and 'post_status' => 'any', it would not return the post if the post status is draft.

I was able to work around this by using 'post__in' => array( 123 ) instead. So:

$args = array(
    'post__in' => array( 123 ),
    'post_type' => 'any',
    'post_status' => 'any',
);
$query = new WP_Query( $args );
// ... etc.
0

It looks like you might have an odd bug going on. Try replacing the oneline WP_Query with the following:

$query = new WP_Query();
$posts = $query->query( $args );
5
  • Should I then also change $query to $posts in $query->have_posts() and $query->the_post()?
    – supertrue
    Commented Feb 16, 2012 at 14:21
  • Yep, though you could name my $query to $my_query and my $posts to $query and it wouldn't make much difference. Basically the issue I'm trying to circumvent is the failure of the query to process...actually, where did you put that print_r() you did?
    – mor7ifer
    Commented Feb 17, 2012 at 1:46
  • I put it after WP_Query and before the loop, like this: $query = new WP_Query( $args ); print_r($query); while ( $query->have_posts() ) : $query->the_post();.
    – supertrue
    Commented Feb 17, 2012 at 18:44
  • Yea, try calling the query() method and see how that goes.
    – mor7ifer
    Commented Feb 18, 2012 at 4:54
  • Any solution to this? Commented Mar 7, 2015 at 16:30

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