The Moltin shopping cart composer package makes it easy to implement a shopping basket into your application and store the cart data using one of the numerous data stores provided. You can also inject your own data store if you would like your cart data to be stored elsewhere.
Download and install composer from http://www.getcomposer.org/download
Add the following to your project composer.json
file
{
"require": {
"moltin/cart": "dev-master"
}
}
When you're done just run php composer.phar install
and the package is ready to be used.
Below is a basic usage guide for this package.
Before you begin, you will need to know which storage and identifier method you are going to use. The identifier is how you store which cart is for that user. So if you store your cart in the database, then you need a cookie (or some other way of storing an identifier) so we can link the user to a stored cart.
In this example we're going to use the cookie identifier and session for storage.
use Moltin\Cart\Cart;
use Moltin\Cart\Storage\Session;
use Moltin\Cart\Identifier\Cookie;
$cart = new Cart(new Session, new Cookie);
Inserting an item into the cart is easy. The required keys are id, name, price and quantity, although you can pass over any custom data that you like.
$cart->insert(array(
'id' => 'foo',
'name' => 'bar',
'price' => 100,
'quantity' => 1
));
Another key you can pass to your insert method is 'tax'. This is a percentage which you would like to be added onto the price of the item.
In the below example we will use 20% for the tax rate.
$cart->insert(array(
'id' => 'foo',
'name' => 'bar',
'price' => 100,
'quantity' => 1,
'tax' => 20
));
You can update items in your cart by updating any property on a cart item. For example, if you were within a cart loop then you can update a specific item using the below example.
foreach ($cart->contents() as $item) {
$item->name = 'Foo';
$item->quantity = 1;
}
You can remove any items in your cart by using the remove()
method on any cart item.
foreach ($cart->contents() as $item) {
$item->remove();
}
You can completely empty/destroy the cart by using the destroy()
method.
$cart->destroy()
You can loop the cart contents by using the following method
$cart->contents();
You can also return the cart items as an array by passing true as the first argument
$cart->contents(true);
$cart->totalItems();
By default this method will return all items in the cart as well as their quantities. You can pass true
as the first argument to get all unique items.
$cart->totalItems(true);
$cart->total();
By default the total()
method will return the total value of the cart as a float
, this will include
any item taxes. If you want to retrieve the cart total without tax then you can do so by passing false to the
total()
method
$cart->total(false);
$cart->has($itemIdentifier);
$cart->item($itemIdentifier);
There are several features of the cart items that may also help when integrating your cart.
You can retrieve the total value of a specific cart item (including quantities) using the following method.
$item->total();
By default, this method will return the total value of the item plus tax. So if you had a product which costs 100, with a quantity of 2 and a tax rate of 20% then the total returned by this method would be 240.
You can also get the total minus tax by passing false to the total()
method.
$item->total(false);
This would return 200.
You can check if a cart item has options by using the hasOptions()
method.
if ($item->hasOptions()) {
// We have options
}
$item->remove();
$item->toArray();