Forum Moderators: buckworks
I would also be interested in a system that would have Paypal buy now cabibilities but instead of going right to Paypal to pay, the otems be added to a shooping cart and then once done shopping the person can go to Paypal and pay for the total of all the items they have selected.
Is this possible?
It took me just a short time to get the hang of how to code each product for drop down boxes (option choices) and to link the "add to cart" button to the shopping cart. Otherwise, it's fairly easy.
Just my opinion. The Paypal option mentioned in the previous post works just as well also.
No and Yes.
You will always need to provide some form of template if you want the cart to look like your website.
That being said, there are services that offer you the shopping cart capabilities but you don't need to (or can't) change the way they look with the exception of choosing a preformatted template, adding your business name and some copy, and/or changing a few fonts and colors.
Contributions are out there to help you change templates and such. It seems overwhelming but is really not once you get the hang of it.
I have a good knowledge of html and css but the php thing is all new to me.
I have designed a site that I want to be an ecommerce site. Will I be able to keep the design I have made and incorporate osCommerce? Or will that need a real in depth knowledge of php?
I know some Javascript and have started to learn php, they don't seem a million miles away from each other.
I think all the carts have their pros and cons - all depending on how much upfront work you want to put into getting the cart set up and loading your products. With carts like OsCommerce, once you have your cart tweaked to your liking, adding products is a snap. Carts like Mals and PayPal, you have to constantly type out code for each product you enter (most of the time you can copy/paste that code from product to product, just changing unique info).
*shrugs* It's not like you can't start with something easy like Mals and on the side, begin working on OsCommerce or the like and then do a switch when you're ready with relatively little down time.
Great forum support and many hacks available
but the real beauty is that if you are CSS knowledable
you could really make it feel as you own.
I do not work or get kickback from them
I only did a few installs for a few clients with a low budget that needed a fast installed E-solution.
Primarily, I do NOT want to have to load my products into a database and have the shopping cart software dictate how my website is going to look. I know HTML and CSS very very well and can make nice looking websites. My customers hire me because of this. I've spent the past ten years becoming proficient in HTML and I don't want to toss all that experience out the door to learn how to manipulate pre-laid-out templates.
All I want of my shopping cart is to handle the shopping cart parts of the application and leave the product display to me.
Is there anything out there like this? Preferably perl-based? If there's a good cart and a decent support system (forum or whatever), I'd put in the time to learn php.
Thanks.
I read what you said. What you said was, "Cube cart will be your friend". I don't need another friend. What I need is a good cart that doesn't force me to use its product database. And unless the features listed on the site are wrong, this is exactly what Cube Cart is.
* Inventory Stock Control
* Unlimited Images/Photos per Product
* Product can be placed in unlimited categories
* More control over the store layout (e.g. No. products per page, multi column categories and ordering)
* Multiple stores with one database
* Multilevel categories so that products can be located easily and logically
* Product search facility
* Sale mode on/off
* Add/Delete/Edit products and categories within admin
* Upload & delete category/product images in *.jpg, *.png or *.gif format
* Database backup facility
This sure sounds like a product database to me!
* Easy to customize site theme from settings
I don't need a "site theme". I'm a website designer and graphic artist.
At first glance, it appears that Agora Cart might do what I need. It has database capabilities, but it is also designed to work from static html pages containing the product info.
I took a quick look at Mal's, but the idea that he'll host that cart for you at no charge doesn't sound right. Nobody does nuthin' for free. There's got to be a catch there, but I don't know what it is.
no catch - just simple business
you get the basic cart free of charge
if you want extras, or you want to integrate with certain payment providers, you pay a few $ per month
that's all there is to it
it's a simple business model and it works - just look at the number of companies using mals
there are a couple of other carts like that in the uk - fastcart and romancart - all 3 are very good
My testing took place some time ago and since I have not kept up to date with changes or updates with Agora. It is possible that the problem may be resolved now in later versions.
It could have been the database server but I doubt it since I was using oscommerce on the same server with the same amount of products with no problem.
Has anyone had any speed/performance issues with Ecommercetemplates?
Has anyone had any speed/performance issues with Ecommercetemplates?the template has been exensivily tested for a large product database both the MS Access and the MySQL, I am currently working with a site that is going from 1400 products to over 10k and as of yet we are not experiencing any performance issues. Most performance issues are host related or images that have not been optimized properly. If you are experiencing performance issues check with your host or post on ecommercetemplates support forum.