it is paged, and you can verify that by putting this:
<?php if(is_paged) {echo "paged"; } ?>
at the bottom of any template file to doublecheck.
“Paged” means everything but the first page. Only 2nd pages and onward are “paged”.
Oh, weird — I was testing it almost the same way and it wasn’t working. I guess it was just syntax. I was using this:
<?php if(is_paged() ) {
echo(‘<h2>Test! This is paginated!</h2>’);
} ?>
So I guess those extra parentheses were messing things up. Thanks.
Hmmm. Actually, I just noticed that the test code is showing up on search results or monthly archives that, at least from my perspective, aren’t paged… like if there’s only 3 posts to display and my max per page is 10. Am I still missing the concept? Does is_paged apply to things that _could be_ paged even if they aren’t?
My test code is exactly what whoomi provided above.
Well, I originally was going to respond as Otto did but decided to test it on my own site.. which i why I provided that, since that what I used to test 🙂
My own site behaved as you have indicated — the first page is, indeed, ‘is_paged’.
In fact, I even tested this scenario:
http://www.xxx.org/archives/xxx/xxx/
vs.
http://www.xxx.org/archives/xxx/xxx/page/1/
and they both show up as paged.
I’ve edited those links, I really dont want my site spidered like that.
I got askimeted , Ive replied..
Hmmm.. I didn’t think that was the case. Weird.
Is paged also set on single post pages (ones without the page tag, obviously) ? If so, then it’s a bug and I may know the reason.
Otto42: yep, even on my single.php template, this code…
<?php if(is_paged) echo "Paged!"; ?>
…*does* output Paged! in the HTML. Bug?
Probably. I need to setup a test site and see if I can figure out why it does that. I don’t think it’s supposed to.
i’ve noticed that obviously there’s a difference between is_paged and is_paged() (at least in wp 2.2), betwwen the variable and the function. you have to try out to find the right one for you, because i can’t explain it 😉
I haven’t tested this, but I’m guessing if(is_paged) is actually asking PHP “Is there a function called is_paged?” and PHP is saying “Yep, there’s a function called is_paged“.
Oh! Hah, yeah, Jeremy is correct, I never noticed that.
The code *should* be if (is_paged())... like all those tags. If you leave those off, it’s checking for existence of the function.