5

I try to use this function i have created when a post is published for the first time.

function a_new_post($post){
  $post_id = $post->ID;

  if ( !get_post_meta( $post_id, 'firstpublish', $single = true ) ) {
      // ...run code once
      update_post_meta( $post_id, 'firstpublish', true );
  }
}
add_action( 'draft_to_published', 'a_new_post' );

I can't see anything wrong with it, but when i try to create some sample posts i check the database and the field "firstpublished" has not been created.

Does anyone see anything wrong?

3
  • shouldn't you change the hook to publish_post. draft_to_publish won't run for all the cases Commented Oct 19, 2012 at 7:40
  • I tried publish_post and it does not work (wordpress.stackexchange.com/questions/141779/…)
    – user11948
    Commented Apr 21, 2014 at 22:28
  • This is the most frustrating thing I have ever dealt with in WordPress. There is absolutely now way to catch publish and block update. Now way, no how.
    – user11948
    Commented May 1, 2014 at 20:53

2 Answers 2

18

The correct action is 'draft_to_publish'.

To be sure you used the correct status try to get a list of all registered post statuses (including custom statuses) with:

<pre><?php print '- ' . implode( "\n- ", array_keys( get_post_stati() ) );?></pre>

On a vanilla installation you should get:

  • publish
  • future
  • draft
  • pending
  • private
  • trash
  • auto-draft
  • inherit

Note that publish_post is called each time you edit a published post.

Note also get_post_stati() is one of these unpredictable names in WordPress: it is plain wrong. The plural of the noun status is statuses in English and statūs in Latin. :D

You could also hook into 'transition_post_status', depending on your needs. You get the new and the old status as arguments, the third argument is the post object. It will catch future_to_publish too, and also posts that were trashed once and republished now (trash_to_publish).

Example:

add_action( 'transition_post_status', 'a_new_post', 10, 3 );

function a_new_post( $new_status, $old_status, $post )
{
    if ( 'publish' !== $new_status or 'publish' === $old_status )
        return;

    if ( 'post' !== $post->post_type )
        return; // restrict the filter to a specific post type

    // do something awesome
}
0
0

Post First save Time meta value set so easy to apply on first time.

function a_new_post( $post_id, $post, $update ) {
    if ( !get_post_meta( $post_id, 'firstpublish', $single = true ) ) {
        update_post_meta( $post_id, 'firstpublish', true );
    }
}
add_action( 'save_post', 'a_new_post', 10, 3 );

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