I have created a module called login_to_see_price. This module is used to hide the price of product if user is not not logged in. The module is working fine in admin part. But i am not getting any idea of implementing the settings of the module in all product.
Module have form fields
status which can be 0=>disable 1=>enable
language (the sentence that is used instead of price) => Login to see price
I have kept these value in setting table.
So, when admin enable the setting i.e. status=1
then in froentend in place of product price i needed to display language=Login to see price .
How can i implement this ?
You can do this in each controller where you want to implement this feature. You can do like
if($this->config->get('your_module_status')){
login to see price and other code
}else{
default functionality
}
Opencart Default provide this feature.
Edit setting / option tab under the Account Title there is Option Login Display Price.
Related
I had made a custom field 'warehouse' on User screen(SM201010), and saved some text in this field to the user 'user1'.
The question is when I login as the user1. How can I display the 'warehouse' field on any screen else?
I had try AccessInfo, but dont know how it works. Please help! Thx!
AccessInfo contains basic information on the current user, but adding a custom field to the User screen will not add it as a member of AccessInfo.
If you added a custom field in a DAC Extension, you will need to fetch the User record, get its extension and then you can access this custom value.
Here are some links about extensions :
https://docref.acumatica.com/(W(1))/Wiki/ShowWiki.aspx?pageid=3a427466-1925-4799-8fee-fe34a77021d0
https://docref.acumatica.com/Main.aspx?ScreenId=ShowWiki&pageid=114ae5af-8667-4933-b53d-c4c8667c85ac
I highly suggest you complete the T300 certification class which teaches how to do customizations in Acumatica. It is available in our Open University
We use a construction software, Viewpoint. We need a report to print the GL Accounts associated only with the user running the report. I was wondering if anyone had any ideas on how I could easily and efficiently achieve this? My "last-resort alternative" is just creating separate reports for each GL that pulls only that GL's info.
It depends on how the accounts are associated to the user. If there is a link, you can simply create a user parameter that asks for the user name. Then in the record select of the report you only pull accounts that match the user name in the parameter.
So, for example your parameter is called {?userName}. In the Record Select the formula would something like {Accounts.Salesman} = {?userName}, where {Accounts.Salesman} would be the field that links the user with the account.
You can get the current user name and use it to filter the records in your report. There are 2 ways to do this :
create a parameter, hide it and automatically fill the value. You
will need a special viewer for this scenario. Let me know if this is
what would you prefer I can give you some links. If you leave the
parameter visible the user can insert any value and view any records
use an UFL . For example this one:
http://www.viksoe.dk/code/u2lwin32.htm provides a function LoginName
which will return currently logged user. There are other UFLs which
support similar functionality, check if your company is already
using something . This one is free. You need to register the UFL on
each system which will run the report . Once registered the
available functions will become available for formulas.
I personally prefer the viewer solution because it is more flexible and will cover other scenarios too. However if you need just the username UFL will be a better approach.
Hi
I have not using any shopping cart module, just created a content type (product) and defining several field(attribute) for each product feature.
I want to ask is there any module in Drupal for product comparison or field comparison?
Thanks
No, but there is a way to do it with the Flag module and Views. It will take more work than just turning on a module, but the outcome is the standard product comparison you're looking for. See this article.
The article is no longer online: here the content of the original post.
Ubercart Product Comparison
For me, using Ubercart in Drupal as an e-commerce solution for your website is the way to go. I have been using Ubercart for years now for a number of web design and development projects, and there are a massive amount of contribute modules to beef it up. One feature that I have been keen to work on is a Product Comparison feature, which would allow users to select products and have them display on a page, providing them with a nice and easy layout to easily compare their selected products.
After searching around the web, I found a few articles and posts from people looking for this feature, asking how it could work or if anyone had done it, but couldn’t find anything that said “here it is, this is how it can be done”. So, after a little bit or research and a bit of a play, I have come up with a solution which is not that difficult to achieve and only requires some already existing Drupal modules with just a few tweaks.
Note: This tutorial assumes that you already have a working ecommerce site with Ubercart installed. Best to also try this on a test environment and not a live website.
Step 1. Download Required Modules
Download, install and enable the following modules.
Views (I used 6.x-2.11, I haven’t tested it with any other releases)
Flag (I used 6.x-2.0-beta3, I haven’t tested it with any other releases)
Step 2. Flags configuration – Setting up your “compare”
Once you have enabled the Flags module, go to the flags administration page at /admin/build/flags.
Click the Add link, enter the name of your flag (something like “compare”), and leave the flag type as “node”, and submit.
On the next screen you will need to configure your new flag. Complete the following fields (changing the values if you like). I setup my configuration so only registered users of the website could compare products.
Title – Compare Products
Flag link text – Add to compare
Flagged message - [title] has been added to your compare
Unflag link text – Remove from compare
Unflagged message – [title] has been removed from your compare
Flaggable content – Product
Check “Display login link for anonymous users.” and for anonymous link text add “[login] to add to your compare”
For flag access, check flag and unflag for authenticated users
Under Display options select “Display link on node page” and “JavaScript toggle” as link type
Click submit to save your flag.
With the settings we used, the “flag link text” should now display on your product nodes. Clicking it should make the “flagged message” appear and the link changed to your “unflag link text” using JavaScript.
So what we are doing here is just flagging nodes – it’s actually pretty simple. We are flagging/unflagging them as “compare product”, so you should now be able to (by clicking on the link provided on your products) add and remove products to compare on your website.
Now we have done this, we need to create a page to display our “flagged” products, in which this case is the products we want to compare.
Step 3. Creating out Compare Products Page
Go to the Views Administration page, enabling the Flag module creates a default flag view. You can use this as a reference, or even change this view to what you need, it’s totally up to you. All we need is a view with (at least) the settings explained below.
DEFAULTS
Basic Settings – Use at least the following settings
Title: Product Comparison
Style: Table
Items per page: Unlimited
Access: Authenticated user
Empty text: Full HTML
- You have not yet added any products to compare. Click the “Add to compare” link when viewing a product to add it to this page.
Relationships
Add the following relationship:
Flags: Node flag
- label: compare
- check “Include only flagged content”
- flag: select the flag you created in step 2
- by: current user
Fields – You can put whatever fields here you would like to show up against each product. You must include the Node Title, and ideally you would want to show a thumbnail of the product, its price and description and the unflag link to allow users to remove it from this page. I have the following fields for my compare:
Content Image using an imagecache, linking to product
Node: Title linking to product
Flags: Flag link
- Relationship: select the one you added
Product: Sell Price
Node: Teaser
Filters
Node: Published Yes
AND SAVE
Now add a new page display view and give it a URL, then save. Navigate to your new compare page using the URL you entered. If you haven’t “flagged” any products yet, go do so and once done you should see those products displayed on your Compare Products page!!!
But, there is one slight issue. Because we needed to use Style: Table to get the layout to better suit a compare list, it still doesn’t display it the way we need it too. We want to display each of the products horizontally, with each field label shown on the far left so it is easy to compare our products. To do this we need to retheme the table style for our view.
Step 4. Theme the table output of the view
Under Theme: Information for our view, it displays a list of all the possible templates for the display plugin and for the style plugins. Look for the list titled Style output. This is what we want. It lists the possible templates we can use to change the theming of the style output. The first one it displays is the generic template for the table style output but we don’t want to use this one, because if we do we could effect any other table style view that may be on the site. So best to use the next one across, mine was called views-view-table–flag-compare.tpl.php.
Create a new php file and name the file to the template name you want to use. In my case my file is named views-view-table–flag-compare.tpl.php.
Paste the Drupal 6 code from here http://drupal.org/node/174578 into your template file.
Then place the file in your themes directory – and presto! Your comparison table should be laid out more like a comparison style grid. Below is a screenshot of what my Comparison page looks like after a little bit of extra styling.
Try this module: https://drupal.org/project/comparison
Allows the comparison of the attributes of two or more nodes by generating a table. A checkbox is added to nodes to allow them to be included in the comparison. If two or more nodes are selected a link is added to a page with a comparison table.
I have column Status (0= Default, 1=Accepted, 2=Rejected), when first creating this list
I want to hidden this field and filling it with default value (0).
On edit form, I want to hide this column from updating if user role is not HelpDesk.
Thx
For your first requirement, you could use SPUtility.js (full disclosure this is a library I maintain). You would basically put some JavaScript in a Content Editor Web Part on your NewForm.aspx page:
SPUtility.GetSPField('Status').Hide();
If you want to change the value (if you don't have a default specified in your list settings) then you could do:
SPUtility.GetSPField('Status').SetValue('Default').Hide();
The second requirement is a bit tougher. You don't really specify how the user gets a role of "HelpDesk" (profile property? SharePoint group?). Depending on how it is setup, you may be able to use an AJAX call to the SharePoint webservices to check their security. Or you could write a custom webpart that validates their role and then emits some JavaScript.
Use Infowise Smart List Lite, the free version of our Smart List Pro product. Your requirement is just one of its many features.
I am developing an application under Groovy using scafoldig.
We are using the Acegi plugin for security.
We have a class called ChangeManagement defined as follows (simplified version)
class ChangeManagement {
static constraints = {
company(nullable:false)
lastModifiedByUser(nullable:false)
}
Company company
static belongsToCompany = [company:Company]
User lastModifiedByUser
static belongsToUser = [lastModifiedByUser:User]
}
When I address the create method I will get a pull-down menu
with the label "Last Modified By" with all the users from the table Users,
which is the standard behaviour.
Instead of this I would like to have directly the user who is already logged in and
no pull down menu. I've already generate the create template and I can modify it.
I am assuming that I have to get the username from the session.
If my assumption is true, how to get this username? and if I am wrong then from where can I get the username of the current user?
Thanks in advance.
See this question for details on how to get the current username.
I'd also suggest looking into Grails Filters for one way to easily stuff the user into the model after all controller calls and make it available in the view. I use this on my app to put the name of the logged in user in the upper right hand corner of the screen.