Can please somebody help me find the best solution?
I need to put a configurable product on a quote. and later convert the quote into an order. The problem here is that only the total price of the configuration can be stored in the quote but not the parts it consist out of and the quantity. In the order it is solved by creating a productionrun and connecting the required products and quantities there. In the cart it is stored in the configWrapper. The only way i see now is to create a new table for the quoteItem and probably for the shopping list and the CustRequestItem too..... to store the product and quantity..... anybody any suggestions? thanks in advance, regards, Hans |
Hans,
the best way to go is to probably implement the part of the configurable stuff that was originally planned but then never completed: add support for storing the configurations. There are already entities for this in the system (for details, please search on the mailing lists because I've posted there 2-3 times details about the original plans - try searching for ProductConfig* or ProductConfigConfig that is the entity that should store the configurations) Then the config id could be added to the quote (but we should discuss a bit more about this, I guess, because is a pretty major change), request, order items etc... Or (probably better) we could use the configId to create a new special type of variant product (something like "variant configuration", associated to the configurable product template and to the given configId) and then use the new productId in quotes, requests, order items etc... Jacopo Hans Bakker wrote: > Can please somebody help me find the best solution? > > I need to put a configurable product on a quote. and later convert the quote > into an order. > > The problem here is that only the total price of the configuration can be > stored in the quote but not the parts it consist out of and the quantity. > > In the order it is solved by creating a productionrun and connecting the > required products and quantities there. In the cart it is stored in the > configWrapper. > > The only way i see now is to create a new table for the quoteItem and probably > for the shopping list and the CustRequestItem too..... to store the product > and quantity..... > > anybody any suggestions? > > thanks in advance, > > regards, > Hans |
In reply to this post by hans_bakker
On Feb 27, 2007, at 2:27 AM, Hans Bakker wrote: > Can please somebody help me find the best solution? > > I need to put a configurable product on a quote. and later convert > the quote > into an order. > > The problem here is that only the total price of the configuration > can be > stored in the quote but not the parts it consist out of and the > quantity. > > In the order it is solved by creating a productionrun and > connecting the > required products and quantities there. In the cart it is stored in > the > configWrapper. > > The only way i see now is to create a new table for the quoteItem > and probably > for the shopping list and the CustRequestItem too..... to store > the product > and quantity..... The basic issue is that we have no way to persist product configuration data except in a BOM, etc. We really need some entities to store a configuration, and then be able to attach those to requests, quotes, and even things like shopping lists and such. I think this will require a little bit more than just productId and quantity to make it possible to reload the configuration options, in fact it should probably be more config specific and have something like a config item id rather than a product id. Anyway, Jacopo may have more (and more helpful) thoughts on this as he has mentioned this a few times. -David smime.p7s (3K) Download Attachment |
In reply to this post by Jacopo Cappellato
The original idea, if I'm not wrong was this:
a) add a "store" method to the ProductConfigWrapper (or Worker) to store the configuration in the ProductConfigConfig entity (by assigning a new configId) b) add a new constructor to the ProductConfigWrapper to load a wrapper from a stored configId Jacopo Jacopo Cappellato wrote: > Hans, > > the best way to go is to probably implement the part of the configurable > stuff that was originally planned but then never completed: add support > for storing the configurations. > There are already entities for this in the system (for details, please > search on the mailing lists because I've posted there 2-3 times details > about the original plans - try searching for ProductConfig* or > ProductConfigConfig that is the entity that should store the > configurations) > Then the config id could be added to the quote (but we should discuss a > bit more about this, I guess, because is a pretty major change), > request, order items etc... > Or (probably better) we could use the configId to create a new special > type of variant product (something like "variant configuration", > associated to the configurable product template and to the given > configId) and then use the new productId in quotes, requests, order > items etc... > > Jacopo > > > Hans Bakker wrote: >> Can please somebody help me find the best solution? >> >> I need to put a configurable product on a quote. and later convert the >> quote into an order. >> >> The problem here is that only the total price of the configuration can >> be stored in the quote but not the parts it consist out of and the >> quantity. >> >> In the order it is solved by creating a productionrun and connecting >> the required products and quantities there. In the cart it is stored >> in the configWrapper. >> >> The only way i see now is to create a new table for the quoteItem and >> probably for the shopping list and the CustRequestItem too..... to >> store the product and quantity..... >> >> anybody any suggestions? >> >> thanks in advance, >> >> regards, >> Hans > |
In reply to this post by David E Jones
David,
David E. Jones wrote: > > Chances are Jacopo will have similar and maybe more complete advice. > Did you notice that recently you and I send out our posts about the same subjects mostly in the same time? And there are probably 9 hours of difference with the timezones! :-) Jacopo |
On Feb 27, 2007, at 2:42 AM, Jacopo Cappellato wrote: > David E. Jones wrote: >> Chances are Jacopo will have similar and maybe more complete advice. > > Did you notice that recently you and I send out our posts about the > same subjects mostly in the same time? And there are probably 9 > hours of difference with the timezones! :-) It just isn't right is it... ;) I guess I should get to bed! -David smime.p7s (3K) Download Attachment |
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