The extension is a small but powerful extension which "solely" adds a shopping cart to your TYPO3 installation and is well suited for content commerce.
The extension allows you to add products to a cart and handles the order process completely.
There are other awesome extensions like extcode/cart-products
, extcode/cart-events
, and extcode/cart-books
to
handle different types of products.
Furthermore, you will find some payment provider extensions like extcode/cart-payone
, extcode/cart-paypal
,
extcode/cart-saverpay
, and more to add payment methods to the checkout process.
- makes intensive use of the TYPO3 Core API functionality
- very well expandable
- several hooks, signal slots, and interfaces
- API (finisher pipeline) to process the order with possibility to register own tasks
- API to add payment providers
- API to connect your own product extensions
- highly configurable through TypoScript
- proved Bootstrap templates
- backend module to show and utilize orders
The recommended way to install the extension is by using Composer.
In your Composer based TYPO3 project root, just do composer require extcode/cart
.
Download and install the extension with the extension manager module.
Attention, Before updating to a new minor version or upgrading to a new major version, be sure to check the changelog section in the documentation. Sometimes minor versions also result in minor adjustments to own templates or configurations.
Cart | TYPO3 | PHP | Support/Development |
---|---|---|---|
9.x.x | 12.0 | 8.1+ | Features, Bugfixes, Security Updates |
8.x.x | 10.4, 11.5 | 7.2+ | Features, Bugfixes, Security Updates |
7.x.x | 10.4 | 7.2 - 7.4 | Security Updates |
6.x.x | 9.5 | 7.2 - 7.4 | |
5.x.x | 8.7 | 7.0 - 7.4 | |
4.x.x | 7.6 - 8.7 | 5.6 - 7.2 | |
3.x.x | 6.2 - 8.7 | 5.6 - 7.0 | |
2.x.x | |||
1.x.x |
If you need extended support for features and bug fixes outside of the currently supported versions, we are happy to offer paid services.
Please have a look into the official extension documentation in changelog chapter
News uses semantic versioning which basically means for you, that
- bugfix updates (e.g. 1.0.0 => 1.0.1) just includes small bugfixes or security relevant stuff without breaking changes.
- minor updates (e.g. 1.0.0 => 1.1.0) includes new features and smaller tasks without breaking changes.
- major updates (e.g. 1.0.0 => 2.0.0) breaking changes wich can be refactorings, features or bugfixes.
- Ask for an invoice.
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