﻿id,summary,reporter,owner,description,type,status,priority,milestone,component,version,severity,resolution,keywords,cc
16863,get_terms hierarchical/hide_empty incompatible with include/exclude args,martinshopland,,"{{{
$terms = get_terms('taxName', array(
    'hierarchical' => true,
    'hide_empty' => true,
    'include' => array(1, 2, 3)
));
}}}
$terms will not contain a meaningful result set. In order for get_terms to process 'hierarchical' correctly it must recieve in 'include' a full list of term ids for all child terms that may have count > 0, this obviously negates the point of 'include' here.
'include/exclude' is processed at query level, 'hierarchical' is processed post query and expects the results of the query to be unfiltered.
The following patch seems to fix the issue in my application, I think this approach would need to take in 'child_of' also, which I haven't done here.
{{{
diff --git a/wp-includes/taxonomy.php b/wp-includes/taxonomy.php
index 89532dc..2f51bea 100644
--- a/wp-includes/taxonomy.php
+++ b/wp-includes/taxonomy.php
@@ -1337,9 +1337,13 @@ function &get_terms($taxonomies, $args = '') {
 
 	// Make sure we show empty categories that have children.
 	if ( $hierarchical && $hide_empty && is_array($terms) ) {
+
+        $taxTerms = !(empty($include) && empty($exclude) && empty($exclude_tree)) ?
+            get_terms($taxonomies) : $terms;
+
 		foreach ( $terms as $k => $term ) {
 			if ( ! $term->count ) {
-				$children = _get_term_children($term->term_id, $terms, $taxonomies[0]);
+				$children = _get_term_children($term->term_id, $taxTerms, $taxonomies[0]);
 				if ( is_array($children) )
 					foreach ( $children as $child )
 						if ( $child->count )
}}}
",defect (bug),new,normal,Awaiting Review,General,3.1,normal,,has-patch,
