Quote from AlexZarr on November 18, 2019, 14:50
Hello,
I was wondering if you can help me with what I am trying to build with WOOF. Basically, it is a hierarchy form for car parts, with a structure like Make - Model - Car component.
How do I configure it efficiently? I was thinking of having different makes/brands as main product categories, then have multiple car models as sub categories to every Make category and then only show car part options (attribute) after choosing make. Is there a way to hide the component types (attribute terms) that don't apply to products under the selected Model category? Is this going to work in practice?
I find it quite difficult to build such a form even after watching all the main tutorials for WOOF. Can you show me what settings to use in the main WOOF interface to do it? Also, is there a better way of doing what I want to achieve? Thank you in advance for your time and support! I am eagerly awaiting for your detailed response.
Hello,
I was wondering if you can help me with what I am trying to build with WOOF. Basically, it is a hierarchy form for car parts, with a structure like Make - Model - Car component.
How do I configure it efficiently? I was thinking of having different makes/brands as main product categories, then have multiple car models as sub categories to every Make category and then only show car part options (attribute) after choosing make. Is there a way to hide the component types (attribute terms) that don't apply to products under the selected Model category? Is this going to work in practice?
I find it quite difficult to build such a form even after watching all the main tutorials for WOOF. Can you show me what settings to use in the main WOOF interface to do it? Also, is there a better way of doing what I want to achieve? Thank you in advance for your time and support! I am eagerly awaiting for your detailed response.