I am building a simple caching class and I want to use this class to cache queries. My initial thinking was to create a `Query` class and use this to handle all queries, meaning the `Query` class would use my `Cache` class to check if there is a saved query, otherwise it would run `WP_query` or `$wpdb` and cache the results. So far so good and I want to take this one step further. What about the queries that wordpress runs by default ? Wordpress core functions won't use my class, so my question is this: Is there a way to hook into wordpress on query execution level ? The only hooks I was able to find were hooks about modifying the query, but what I want is a hook that handles the query execution itself (so that I can stop the query execution and retrieve the data that the query would search for from the cache). For example, with wordpress structure I would guess that all queries would get executed at the end by `$wpdb->query('FINAL BUILT QUERY HERE');`. I don't know if this is true, but it is something that would make sense. So if this was the case, I would be looking for an action filter that receives the final query as a string or as an array of arguments and expects query results as a return (sounds like an insecure hook, but you get the idea). By default that hook would run `$wpdb->query` on the input data and that's where I come in to override this behaviour and add a detour for a cached query check before the actual execution. I hope my example makes sense to understand what I am looking for, anyone knows a way to go about it ?