I'm trying to make a TextArea field in the Opportunities module show only a single row of data then allow the user to scroll through the remaining data. How can this be done?
I have looked this up here on Stack Overflow but cannot seem to make this work.
I am using SugarCRM CE version 6.5.13
Thanks.
Create the file if it doesn't already exist:
custom/modules/Opportunities/metadata/editviewdefs.php
Within the edit view definition file you can use displayParams to change or add attributes to a specific field. For instance, I added the attribute 'rows' and made it 1 row (it can still expand).
6 =>
array (
0 =>
array (
'name' => 'description',
'label' => 'LBL_DESCRIPTION',
'displayParams' =>
array (
'rows' => 1,
),
),
),
Hope this helps.
Related
I am facing a problem to add such a product to the cart.
I manage to create the booking with:
$new_booking = get_wc_booking ($new_booking_data);
$new_booking -> create ($status);
But then I tried to apply these different methods without success:
add_cart_item_data ($cart_item_meta, $product_id); // error 500
or
$ new_booking_object -> add_cart_item ($cart_item_meta); // error 500
The $cart_item_meta object I create is like the following (some keys are duplicative, like for example start and start_date, because I observed in the code that both names are used, and I wanted to be sure to send at least the correct one ;-) ). BTW, by comparing with standard bookings created via the plugin form, I can be sure that the values I set in the array have the correct format.
$cart_item_meta = array(
'all_day' => false,
'cost' => $price,
'customer_id' => 1,
'user_id' => 1,
'date_created' => '',
'date_modified' => '',
'end' => $endDate,
'end_date' => $endDate,
'google_calendar_event_id' => 0,
'order_id' => $order->get_id(),
'order_item_id' => 0,
'parent_id' => 0,
'person_counts' => array($addPaxId => $pax),
'persons' => array($addPaxId => $pax),
'product_id' => $prodId,
'resource_id' => $resourceId,
'start' => $startDate,
'start_date' => $startDate,
'status' => 'in-cart',
'local_timezone' => 'Europe/Brussels',
);
I do get a record in the "posts" table, with the same specifics as a normal booking created by the normal way. In particular, I get post_type = wc_booking, and post_status = in-cart. But the cart remains empty.
I have compared all the entries in the database, and I can't see what is missing. But I'm definitely missing some of the understanding of the mechanics of WooCommerce ...
Does someone can help me to find a way to pass the final step: putting the created booking in the cart ? Thanks!
Well, maybe someone will be interested to know how I worked around, as so far I couldn't find a complete programming solution.
The products I want to book programmatically and add to the cart are existing products in my WooCommerce store. My purpose is just to use my own form to allow the customer to better understand what he books (I'm managing a flight simulators center with several machines), and the native WC Bookings form is not clear enough for me, and moreover it is really heavy and slow.
So after gathering customers info with my own form (simulator, duration, participants, timeslot), my problem was to put all this in the cart. I could achieve to create the relevant booking in the database, but not add it to the cart.
I observed that when you book via the standard form, you send a POST to the server on the same product page, including the following parameters (random data for example):
wc_bookings_field_persons_xxxx => 2 // 'xxxx' is the ID of the related 'bookable_person' in 'posts'
wc_bookings_field_start_date_month => 11 // November (sample)
wc_bookings_field_start_date_day => 26 // the 26th (sample)
wc_bookings_field_start_date_year => 2021 // Year (sample)
wc_bookings_field_start_date_time => 2021-11-26T15:00:00+0100
wc_bookings_field_start_date_local_timezone => Europe/Brussels
add-to-cart => 1147 // the product ID in 'posts'
So the simplest solution is to create a POST call (via form + button or button + ajax), setting the action/ajax url to the related product after filling the fields here above with the custom form...
EDIT: while I was thinking this was the solution, I discovered that it worked only when another tab in my browser previously 'opened the door' by adding the same product in the standard way. But when this tab is closed (or timeout), the above method fails and just open the product page. The 302 redirect that was operating stops to work for un unknown reason, and we get the standard 200 straight forward. No Cart.
So the question is still pending.
I want to log every action that the users do. What's the best way to do this and why? Using Custom post types to insert every action as a new post or using user_meta and save details in a multidimensional array? The data would look like this:
array(
array(
'type' => 'comment',
'time' => 1416335275,
'comment_id' => 210
),
array(
'type' => 'post'
'time' => 1416335275,
'post_id' => 450
),
array(
'type' => 'visited'
'visit_type' => 'page',
'time' => 1416335275,
'page_id' => 378
),
// ... etc.
)
I don't ask how to do this, just what do you think is the best way to store that data.
Relevant question: Why in the world would you want to do this?
OK, well to answer this is a generalized sense, Wordpress is a program that interfaces a database with HTTP requests. So you'd have to capture the content of each HTTP request, and probably filter that through requests that contain logged in users versus not logged in users. To be really specific you'd also have to capture the state of the database at each intersection! Sounds like a nightmare.
Probably you have something much more specific in mind than: "I want to log every action that the users do."
The best way to store data relevant to a user, is via the user meta system. For example:
http://codex.wordpress.org/Function_Reference/add_user_meta
Im a TOTAL newbie to drupal development so please help me here, ok i have created a custom module which so far creates a custom database how do i go about creating a list page in the backend that i can use to manage each item in the DB and how do i go about creating a custom edit form to manage the insert/ edit / delete of each item
function rollover_res_schema() {
$rollover_res = array();
$rollover_res['rollover_res'] = array(
// Example (partial) specification for table "node".
'description' => 'Positioning for rollovers',
'fields' => array(
'rollover_res_id' => array(
'description' => 'The primary identifier for a node.',
'type' => 'serial',
'unsigned' => TRUE,
'not null' => TRUE,
),
'rollover_res_actual' => array(
'description' => 'The main rollover plain text.',
'type' => 'text',
'length' => 255,
'not null' => TRUE,
),
),
'indexes' => array(
'rollover_res_id' => array('rollover_res_id'),
),
'primary key' => array('rollover_res_id'),
);
return $rollover_res;
}
If you're a total newbie to Drupal development you should not be writing ANY code for the first month or two and you shouldn't do custom database code the first 6 months.
Start with learning about Fields and Views and once you grasp these you can add one of Display Suite, Context or Panels.
The key to learning how to do things in drupal is:
1) google search how
2) see how other modules do it. In this case, look at some core modules, such as the block module. In there you'll see the schema in .install, and you'll see some functions that create forms for saving new blocks, such as block_add_block_form. You'll need to read up on the form API. But basically, you'll create a form hook to display a form, a menu hook to create a page to hold the form, and a hook to submit the form. If you grep through your code base, you'll see many of examples that you can copy. In fact, there are drupal example modules you can download that cover most of the basics: https://www.drupal.org/project/examples
But to learn how to interact with the database, you could find a module that does something similar to what you're doing and look at how it uses hook_menu to set up page callbacks, forms for editing data.
I have been trying to create order programatically, it's working well except custom option.
I have one custom option which reference id is 435. I have tried the following. But it seems not working
$order->setData(array(
'options' => array(
435 => $customvalue,
)
));
I got above suggestion From here
How to save custom option field value when create order programatically?
I got an answer for my question from here
Its working rock
$existentOptions['additional_options'][] = array(
'label' => $optiontitle, // Title of custom option field
'value' => $customvalue, // Value of custom option field
);
For more details, you can check on my blog here
I’ve been scratching my head for days on this one. Any help or a push in the right direction would be greatly appreciated.
I’ve extended the sales report under Reports->Sales->Orders and created my own custom filters to filer the report by channels.
Each order has a ‘channel_name’ attribute to identify whether the order came from eBay, Amazon, etc.
Now I cannot for the life of me figure out how sales/order_aggregated_created table that is used to generate the reports is created. Where does the magic happen? I want to add ‘channel_name’ to the order_aggregated_created table to be able to filter by this attribute, but I cannot figure out how to this.
Diagram for order_aggregated_created table with its attributes:
http://www.magento-exchange.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/MAGENTO-SALES-ORDER-ER.png
Mage_Sales_Model_Resource_Report_Order_Collection is where the magic starts in retrieving the sales totals, particularly if I understood this correctly inside
protected function _getSelectedColumns(){...}
if (!$this->isTotals()) {
$this->_selectedColumns = array(
'period' => $this->_periodFormat,
'orders_count' => 'SUM(orders_count)',
'total_qty_ordered' => 'SUM(total_qty_ordered)',
'total_qty_invoiced' => 'SUM(total_qty_invoiced)',
'total_income_amount' => 'SUM(total_income_amount)',
'total_revenue_amount' => 'SUM(total_revenue_amount)',
'total_profit_amount' => 'SUM(total_profit_amount)',
'total_invoiced_amount' => 'SUM(total_invoiced_amount)',
'total_canceled_amount' => 'SUM(total_canceled_amount)',
'total_paid_amount' => 'SUM(total_paid_amount)',
'total_refunded_amount' => 'SUM(total_refunded_amount)',
'total_tax_amount' => 'SUM(total_tax_amount)',
'total_tax_amount_actual' => 'SUM(total_tax_amount_actual)',
'total_shipping_amount' => 'SUM(total_shipping_amount)',
'total_shipping_amount_actual' => 'SUM(total_shipping_amount_actual)',
'total_discount_amount' => 'SUM(total_discount_amount)',
'total_discount_amount_actual' => 'SUM(total_discount_amount_actual)',
);
}
If would be awesome if I can just ‘channel_name’ =>$this->_channelName, and be on my merry way.
After a lot and lot of research it turns out that sales/order_aggregated_created table gets generated in here:
Mage_Sales_Model_Resource_Report_Order_Createdat
now I've looked here before seemed like exactly what I needed, but any changes I made would not reflect in Magento reports especially inside the sales/order_aggregated_created table.
I found out that Mage_Sales_Model_Resource_Report_Order_Createdat only gets called when you refresh the statistics inside Reports->Sales->Orders, only then a NEW sales/order_aggregated_created table is generated! So for anyone looking to filter the order sales report by a custom attribute, look inside: /app/code/core/Mage/Sales/Model/Resource/Report/Order/Createat.php