|
Manual adjustments on orders (ie. giving a customer an overall discount
on an already paid order because of bad customer service or some other misunderstanding) is currently complicated by the fact that there is no way to trace a value-only refund back to the order it was created against. Tracing the order is required in order to insure that the refund is sent to the payment method that was used to generate the order. I suggest adding an "orderId" field to the ReturnAdjustment entity. This would be analogous to the orderId/orderItemSeqId fields in the ReturnItem entity. Does anyone object to that change? I need to analyze what services would be impacted by this change. I think as long as it is an optional field it should not be disruptive. -- Ean Schuessler, CTO [hidden email] 214-720-0700 x 315 Brainfood, Inc. http://www.brainfood.com |
|
That does sound like a good solution Ean. Currently the only way to refund against an order is to choose an OrderItem (through ReturnItem) or OrderAdjustment (through ReturnAdjustment) and attach the refund to that. I was thinking you could use ReturnItem for this, but it has a FK to OrderItem (ie you can't populate the orderId and leave the orderItemSeqId null), and while I haven't looked into it I think the code for returns depends on a productId being present for a ReturnItem and such. On the other hand, it might be easier to change the return code to allow a ReturnItem to not have a orderItemSeqId than it would be to add the orderId and related functionality to the ReturnAdjustment. -David On Dec 23, 2009, at 5:01 PM, Ean Schuessler wrote: > Manual adjustments on orders (ie. giving a customer an overall discount > on an already paid order because of bad customer service or some other > misunderstanding) is currently complicated by the fact that there is no > way to trace a value-only refund back to the order it was created > against. Tracing the order is required in order to insure that the > refund is sent to the payment method that was used to generate the order. > > I suggest adding an "orderId" field to the ReturnAdjustment entity. This > would be analogous to the orderId/orderItemSeqId fields in the > ReturnItem entity. Does anyone object to that change? I need to analyze > what services would be impacted by this change. I think as long as it is > an optional field it should not be disruptive. > > -- > Ean Schuessler, CTO > [hidden email] > 214-720-0700 x 315 > Brainfood, Inc. > http://www.brainfood.com > |
|
David E Jones wrote:
> That does sound like a good solution Ean. > > Currently the only way to refund against an order is to choose an OrderItem (through ReturnItem) or OrderAdjustment (through ReturnAdjustment) and attach the refund to that. > > I was thinking you could use ReturnItem for this, but it has a FK to OrderItem (ie you can't populate the orderId and leave the orderItemSeqId null), and while I haven't looked into it I think the code for returns depends on a productId being present for a ReturnItem and such. > > On the other hand, it might be easier to change the return code to allow a ReturnItem to not have a orderItemSeqId than it would be to add the orderId and related functionality to the ReturnAdjustment. > I have an implementation here that will successfully return an adjustment only return all the way through to crediting a billing account. I am having trouble with having the return payment capture to an invoice but I'm not sure whether that is related. Adding the orderId was pretty straightforward. |
| Free forum by Nabble | Edit this page |
