Yeh, sounds fun ;)

On 8 December 2010 20:42, Che Vilnonis <[email protected]> wrote:

>
> Thanks Dominic. Yeah, that helps.
> I think the hardest part might be the session mgmt. with the client vars
> that the legacy CF app uses.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Dominic Watson [mailto:[email protected]]
> Sent: Wednesday, December 08, 2010 3:18 PM
> To: cf-talk
> Subject: Re: CF and a Remote PHP Site...
>
>
> So it sounds like the data will need to be processed in the same request as
> the user visiting some page on your site (so that you can associate the
> data
> with the client in session / client scope).
>
> Something that occurs to me off the top of my head:
>
> * User finishes with 3rd party site and ready to return to you with the
> details...
> * 3rd party sends the user to your page,  providing some token with which
> to
> fetch the data, e.g. locate to:
> yoursite.com/some.cfm?thirdPartyToken=3535A6F4587395EB5B
> * the cfm page that the user lands on  makes a request to 3rd party,
> supplying the token, 3rd party responds with all the relevant data that can
> then be stored in the client/session scope as you are still within the
> clients visit request
>
> Alternatively, the url to which the 3rd party redirects your user could
> have
> all the neccessary data, e.g. locate to:
> yoursite.com/some.cfm?width=487height=48&picture=9734857 etc.
>
> HTH
>
> Dominic
>
> On 8 December 2010 18:27, Che Vilnonis <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> >
> > Thanks Russ. Let me explain further. The third party PHP site would
> > mimic the entire line of products that the picture framing company
> > sells. (IDs and SKUs would be the same.) I would then pass a "Frame
> > ID" to the third party PHP site. Over a period of time, the customer
> > would build his/her frame.
> > Once he/she hits "add to cart", the third party PHP site would pass
> > back several variables such as the selected frame width, frame height,
> > mat width, mat height, second  mat width and height, mat style, mat
> > cut, plexiglass width and height, foam core width and height, etc.
> > Basically, I would need to get back 15-20 variables of data to create
> > one custom picture frame.
> > Does
> > that make more sense?
> >
> > Would a simple CF "listener" page work where all the data is passed
> > back in the query string and then parsed? Would that be the best way to
> do
> this?
> >
> > Thanks, Che
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Russ Michaels [mailto:[email protected]]
> > Sent: Wednesday, December 08, 2010 1:13 PM
> > To: cf-talk
> > Subject: RE: CF and a Remote PHP Site...
> >
> >
> > >From what you have said this sounds really simple to achieve.
> > You presumably have pictures of the frames.
> > User chooses the frame.
> > User uploads their photo
> > Resize the photo to fit in the frame, and overlay it on top of the
> > frame image using a div and position it.
> >
> > Russ
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Che Vilnonis [mailto:[email protected]]
> > Sent: 08 December 2010 17:19
> > To: cf-talk
> > Subject: CF and a Remote PHP Site...
> >
> >
> > We have a client that sells custom built picture frames on an older CF
> app.
> > His competition uses software that allows customers to upload photos
> > and to "visually" see the picture frames they are building. He wants
> > to add this functionality to his web site.
> >
> > I was put in touch with a company that sells this type of software. It
> > is written in PHP. The PHP developer thought we'd be able to "pass
> > data" from my site to his. Once the "visualized" frame was built, he'd
> "pass data"
> > back
> > to me and I would add the custom built frame to the shopping cart.
> >
> > Sending data to the remote site (via XML and CFHTTP) is not an issue.
> >
> > I'm looking for a solution on how to best "receive" the data. Keep in
> > mind, the CF site runs on a CFMX 6 shared server that uses client
> > variables for storage.
> >
> > I realize this is not the best way to do things and there would be
> > pitfalls with session timeouts, etc. Any advice would be appreciated.
> >
> > Thanks, Che
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
>
>
>
> 

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