Hi all, first post here. Hope someone can help. Am evaluating Actinic v10.0.2. Have just raised this with Support, but thought I would also post it to the excellent community on here.
Basically my problem relates to this scenario:
A user has gone to check out and has filled in their address and proceeded to the next step, but then does not finish the checkout process.
Irrespective of whether they selected "remember me" or not, their address details are retained. No matter whether they close the browser or press cancel - there is no way for them to clear their address details.
The only two options for the user appear to be:
1) Clear the cookies in their browser
2) Wait for the session to expire (this could be a number of hours - depends on the setting in Actinic - the absolute minimum is one hour)
Neither of these is satisfactory to me as I do not think an average user would realise these and would expect their personal details not to be retained on the computer unless they had specified "remember me".
I've searched the advanced user guide and forums and found the excellent workaround which reprograms the "Cancel" button on the checkout pages to clear all cookies. However, this relies on Javascript - when Javascript is disabled, the reprogrammed "cancel" button does absolutely nothing at all. Also, it does not solve the problem of a user abandoning the checkout by closing their browser and expecting to have their details cleared.
The reason I see this as an issue is the fact that users may be on a shared computer. I do not think it is reasonable for a user to have no easy way of clearing their personal details once entered.
I think it's great that the shopping cart contents can be retained in case they come back again - but I want a way for the customer's address (and other personal details like phone number, vat number) to be cleared.
If anyone has any thoughts / ideas / hacks at all, it would be hugely appreciated. I had a go at the code myself but didn't really get anywhere as I do not really have enough knowledge of Perl or of the Actinic source (my background is in ASP / HTML / CSS).
Thanks for reading!
Paul
Basically my problem relates to this scenario:
A user has gone to check out and has filled in their address and proceeded to the next step, but then does not finish the checkout process.
Irrespective of whether they selected "remember me" or not, their address details are retained. No matter whether they close the browser or press cancel - there is no way for them to clear their address details.
The only two options for the user appear to be:
1) Clear the cookies in their browser
2) Wait for the session to expire (this could be a number of hours - depends on the setting in Actinic - the absolute minimum is one hour)
Neither of these is satisfactory to me as I do not think an average user would realise these and would expect their personal details not to be retained on the computer unless they had specified "remember me".
I've searched the advanced user guide and forums and found the excellent workaround which reprograms the "Cancel" button on the checkout pages to clear all cookies. However, this relies on Javascript - when Javascript is disabled, the reprogrammed "cancel" button does absolutely nothing at all. Also, it does not solve the problem of a user abandoning the checkout by closing their browser and expecting to have their details cleared.
The reason I see this as an issue is the fact that users may be on a shared computer. I do not think it is reasonable for a user to have no easy way of clearing their personal details once entered.
I think it's great that the shopping cart contents can be retained in case they come back again - but I want a way for the customer's address (and other personal details like phone number, vat number) to be cleared.
If anyone has any thoughts / ideas / hacks at all, it would be hugely appreciated. I had a go at the code myself but didn't really get anywhere as I do not really have enough knowledge of Perl or of the Actinic source (my background is in ASP / HTML / CSS).
Thanks for reading!
Paul
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