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
}
publish_post
.draft_to_publish
won't run for all the casespublish_post
and it does not work (wordpress.stackexchange.com/questions/141779/…)