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 Posted by James Benson on 10/24/05 18:19 
PHP5 has yet to see the maturity and stability PHP4 offers which is why  
most applications use it. 
 
Worst thing you can do is design a website in entirely flash :) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Phillip Oertel wrote: 
> hi, 
>  
> i want to create a "shop server" application. the shop client interface 
> will be in flash (communication with php over xml, soap or amfphp), the 
> administration interface will be html. most likely it will probably be a 
> long-running application that will be extended in several steps, so we 
> need a solid foundation. we also need to get started quickly (who 
> doesn't), otherwise i would consider starting from scratch. 
>  
> i have already looked around quite a lot for a nicely adaptable 
> shop/ecommerce implementation, but haven't been very successful so far. 
> everything i found was conceived in php4 times, where OO wasn't as 
> wide-spread in the php community as it is today. some of the packages 
> are poorly documented (both in-code and separate documentation), have an 
> inconsistent coding style, are dead, are copies of oscommerce with a 
> worse interface, ... 
>  
> feature-wise the best i found was xtcommerce (oscommerce fork) 
> admin interface wise: zencart (oscommerce fork) 
> code-wise: randshop 
> non of them use php5's features, though, none are written object-oriented. 
>  
> i have no info on the performance of these shops, although that 
> shouldn't be a prob as long as it's not desastrous (to some extend, you 
> can always scale hardware-wise). 
>  
> so i am looking for a cleanly layered application where i could swap out 
> the presentation layer. and all important shop data (products, product 
> categories, cart, etc.) should be represented as objects, so i could 
> extend them to implement required customizations. 
> it would be a big plus if the admin interface was well thought-out. 
>  
> we need quite some features like multiple languages, multiple 
> categories, discounts on certain products, payment provider integration, 
> customer newsletters, possibly administration of several slightly 
> different shops in one installation, etc. 
>  
> is there such an application or am i stuck with oscommerce and its forks? 
> i don't need it to be feature complete, as long as there is a way to 
> adapt the code without hacking the whole thing (and loosing the 
> possibility of upgrading). 
>  
> as long as the code was open, i would be happy to pay a certain amount 
> for the application. 
>  
> anyone? 
>  
> phil
 
  
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