mplate? the function you want to "overwrite", wont be
> used, and therefore, wouldn't your app/template/whatever be updated
> improperly than waht you expect it to be?
Steve, maybe the above informs? In any case, the function to be
overwritten is likely to remain fairly stabl
my explanation gives you any good ideas?
Just to put the dots on the I's, the original "actions.php" contains a
lot of *other* functions that I don't want to touch, and that I do
want to leave exposed to the updates process. It's just one single
function I want to hack..
ntly possible in PHP. Time for some lateral thinking.
:-)
David Nelson
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Hi Peter, :-)
On Wed, Nov 3, 2010 at 18:44, Peter Lind wrote:
> You can check with function_exists to see if a function is already defined.
> If not, create it.
The function is definitely already defined, I just need to replace it
without touching the file in which it's defined...
D
named?
If the functions aren't named the same, my replacement function will
never get called by the code that uses the WordPress theme code...
> Try to create a new function and call the original function from there if
> needed...
Sadly, it wouldn't work for the above reason...
But than
Hi, :-)
I'm making a child theme for WordPress. I need to rewrite one function
defined in "../sometheme/functions/actions.php" and put that rewritten
function in "wp-content/themes/sometheme-child/functions/actions.php".
But I want to preserve "../sometheme/functions/actions.php" unchanged
in any
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