Re: taxes

2001-02-16 Thread William R. Mussatto
ing back. On Thu, 15 Feb 2001, Mike Wexler wrote: > Date: Thu, 15 Feb 2001 14:03:33 -0800 > From: Mike Wexler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > To: Mikel King <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Cc: Brady Orand <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [EMAIL PROTECTED], > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: Re:

Re: taxes

2001-02-16 Thread Ken Menzel
ECTED] - Original Message - From: "Vivek Khera" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Thursday, February 15, 2001 10:26 PM Subject: Re: taxes > >>>>> "MK" == Mikel King <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > MK> guys I think you are m

Re: taxes

2001-02-15 Thread Vivek Khera
> "MK" == Mikel King <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: MK> guys I think you are making this a way bigger problem than it MK> really is...e-merce crap is generally taxed based on the location MK> of the vendor; much the same way in which mail order businesses MK> are taxed. You really only have to w

Re: taxes

2001-02-15 Thread denis
Also some states, like California, base their sales taxes for mail-order on the recipients postal code, not the vendors, unless the codes are the same. There are eight or nine different sales tax rates in CA depending on local taxes. Mike Wexler wrote: > Mikel King wrote: > > > &g

Re: taxes

2001-02-15 Thread Mikel King
tomer is located in, then > you need to calculate the tax for *their* locality. So in the normal > case where you are calculating the taxes for just 1 vendors. Who has > only one location, then things can be simplified by dealing with only > the rules of the state (and the localitie

Re: taxes

2001-02-15 Thread Mike Wexler
in, then you need to calculate the tax for *their* locality. So in the normal case where you are calculating the taxes for just 1 vendors. Who has only one location, then things can be simplified by dealing with only the rules of the state (and the localities within the state). >

Re: taxes

2001-02-15 Thread Mikel King
they are in my state. cheers, mikel Mike Wexler wrote: > Actually its even more complicated than this. There are city taxes and > other taxes on other boundaries. In addition the rules as far as what > things are taxable vary by locality. For example, some localities charge > taxe

Re: taxes

2001-02-15 Thread Mike Wexler
Actually its even more complicated than this. There are city taxes and other taxes on other boundaries. In addition the rules as far as what things are taxable vary by locality. For example, some localities charge taxes on shipping and others don't. Brady Orand wrote: > > This is

Re: taxes

2001-02-15 Thread Brady Orand
This is not as easy (conceptually) as it sounds. You have to know the current state tax plus any county taxes applicable. If you set up a table with this information, you can cross reference the location of the buyer with the table, calculate the appropriate taxes, and charge them

Re: taxes

2001-02-14 Thread Mikel King
Wound't you just set a table with an id, state_abrev, & tax columns. Then the id column will match the selection...et cettera...capisce LDL Enterprise wrote: > does anyone know how to calculateg taxes for a shop cart that would set the > tax depending on the state that t

Re: taxes

2001-02-14 Thread Jeremy D. Zawodny
On Wed, Feb 14, 2001 at 01:32:24PM -0700, LDL Enterprise wrote: > > does anyone know how to calculateg taxes for a shop cart that would > set the tax depending on the state that they select when filling out > their contact information? Thanks. Using MySQL? -- Jeremy D. Zawo

taxes

2001-02-14 Thread LDL Enterprise
does anyone know how to calculateg taxes for a shop cart that would set the tax depending on the state that they select when filling out their contact information? Thanks. _ ___ | | | \ | | | |__ | |> || |__ |||___/ || Larry L. [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.ldlenterprise.