There's a lot of things missing with your implementation. I don't know what kinds of data you're allowing the user to manipulate but most usually have some kind of requirements to be acceptable. Like not having certain characters, not being blank, etc. I don't see any validation occurring, so how do you handle values that might be undesirable? And what happens when you receive bad data? How do you inform the user of the bad data and prompt them to correct it?
If we abstract the situation a bit we can come up with generalizations and implement an appropriate solution.
Basically form fields [can] have a default value, a user specified value [on form review], validation requirements and validation errors [with messages]. A form is a collection of fields that upon form submit needs to be validated and if invalid, re-displayed to the user with instructive corrective prompts.
If we create a form class that encapsulates the above logic we can instantiate and use it to pass around our controller/views. Oops, I was just assuming you were using an Model/View/Controller type framework, and I'm not really familiar with wordPress so I don't know if that is exactly applicable. But the principle still applies. On the page where you both display or process the form, here's some pseudo logic how how it might look.
function update_account()
{
// initialize a new form class
$form = new UserAccountInfoForm();
// give the form to your view for rendering
$this->view->form = $form;
// check if form was posted [however your framework provides this check]
if(!Is_Post())
return $this->render('accountform.phtml');
// check if posted form data validates
if(!$form->isValid($_POST))
{
// if the form didn't validate re-display the form
// the view takes care of displaying errors, with the help of its
// copy of the $form object
return $this->render('accountform.phtml');
}
// form validated, so we can use the supplied values and update the db
$values = $form->getValues(); // returns an array of ['fieldname'=>'value']
// escape the values of the array
EscapeArrayValues($values);
// update db
wp_update_user($values);
// inform the user of successful update via flash message
$this->flashMessage('Successfully updated profile');
// go back to main profile page
$this->redirect('/profile');
That makes your controller relatively clean an easy to work with. The view gets some love and care to, utilizing the $form value to display the form correctly. Technically, you can implement a method in the form class to give you the form html, but for simplicity I'm just going to assume your form html is manually coded in accountform.phtml and it just uses $form to get field info
<form action='post'>
<label>first name</label> <input class='<?=$this->form->getElement('first_name')->hasError() ? "invalid":""?>' type='text' name='first_name' value="<?=$this->form->getElement('first_name')->getValue()"/> <span class='errmsg'><?=$this->form->getElement('first_name')->getError()?></span><br/>
<label>last name</label> <input class='<?=$this->form->getElement('last_name')->hasError() ? "invalid":""?>' type='text' name='last_name' value="<?=$this->form->getElement('last_name')->getValue()"/> <span class='errmsg'><?=$this->form->getElement('last_name')->getError()?></span><br/>
<label>other</label> <input class='<?=$this->form->getElement('other')->hasError() ? "invalid":""?>' type='text' name='other' value="<?=$this->form->getElement('other')->getValue()"/> <span class='errmsg'><?=$this->form->getElement('other')->getError()?></span><br/>
<input type='submit' value='submit'/>
</form>
Here the pseudo code relies on the form class method "getElement" which returns the field class instance for the specified field name (which would be created an initialized in the constructor of your form class). Then on the field class methods "hasError" and "getError" to check if the field validated correctly. If the form has not be submitted yet, then these return false and blank, but if the form was posted and invalid, then they will have been set appropriately in the validate method when it was called. Also "getValue" would return either the value supplied by the user when the form was submitted, or if the form has not been submitted, the default value as specified when the field class was instantiated and initialized.
Obviously this pseudo code is relying on a lot of magic that you'd have to implement if you roll your own solution--and it's certainly doable. However, at this point I'll direct you to the Zend Framework Zend_Form components. You can use zend framework components by themselves without having to utilize the entire framework and application structure too. You might also find similar form component solutions from other frameworks but I wouldn't know about those (we are a Zend Framework shop at my work place).
Hopefully this hasn't been too complicated, and you know where to go from here. Of course just ask if you need any clarification.