Customer wants this because the booking is not automatically created,
thus it is possible to overbook. They want to accept the payment of
those that they can actually book.
After months of keeping what does the ACSI checkbox mean, now customer
told us that we should add a discount based on a series of
arbitrary conditions that, and need to be done NOW!
There is no UI to edit the conditions due to lack of time.
This is specially for the departure date: Firefox triggers a change each
time the user writes something, but since the date may be outside the
allowed range while the user is typing, the form replaces the input with
the “corrected” one. The idiomorph thing is to keep the focus in the
“same” field, from the point of view of the user.
It still happens if one is slow enough, but i guess people that want to
write instead of picking the date are usually fast typist. Let’s hope.
Apparently, the bank has to validate the fucking thing on the actual
domain, because of reasons, so we have to replace the current web in
production with this version in test mode, meaning that users **will**
believe they have paid, when in fact they have not.
The warning is for these few people that actually read such notices.
This is the mode they want to work with, but i could not test it because
they do not have it enabled in Redsys. For now, just add the status and
the code to handle the responses.
Now i store all responses, if they are for a valid payment, just in case
i fucked something up. I also needed it because an authorization hold
needs at least two responses: one to accept the hold, and another for
the settlement.
Had to do a couple of changes to the database: add the currency_code to
the payment relation, to format the price according to the payment’s
currency instead of the company’s; and the reference SQL function, to
replace the equivalent golang function, so that i can use it to index
payments.
The rest is mostly the same as any other page, except that the
individual payment’s page is not a form, but a regular info dump.
I also moved the payment settings as a sub-route of payments, as i
believe this makes more sense than an additional user menu item.
Besides the dynamic final cart, that was already handled by HTMx, i had
to check the maximum number of guests, whether the accommodation allows
“overflow”, whether dogs are allowed, and that the booking dates were
within the campground’s opening and closing dates.
I could do all of this with AlpineJS, but then i would have to add the
same validation to the backend, prior to accept the payment. Would not
make more sense to have them in a single place, namely the backend? With
HTMx i can do that.
However, i now have to create the form “piecemeal”, because i may not
have the whole information when the visitor arrives to the booking page,
and i still had the same problem as in commit d2858302efa—parsing the
whole form as is would leave guests and options field empty, rather than
at their minimum values.
One of the fieldsets in that booking form are the arrival and departure
dates, that are the sames we use in the campsite type’s page to
“preselect” these values. Since now are in a separate struct, i can
reuse the same type and validation logic for both pages, making my
JavaScript code useless, but requiring HTMx. I think this is a good
tradeoff, in fact.
I have to ask number and age ranges of hosts of guests for all campsite
types, not only those that have price options for adults, children, etc.
because i must compute the tourist tax for adults. These numbers will
be used to generate de rows for guests when actually creating the
booking, which is not done already.
To satisfy the campsite types that do have a price per guest, not only
per night, i had to add the prices for each range in the
campsite_type_cost relation. If a campsite type does not have price
per person, then that should be zero; the website then does not display
the price.
The minimal price for any campsite type is one adult for one night,
thus to compute the price i need at least the campsite type, the dates,
and the number of adults, that has a minimum of one. I changed the
order of the form to ask for these values first, so i can compute the
initial price as soon as possible. To help further, i show the
<fieldset>s progressively when visitors select options.
This is to be able to link from the booking form, with a link under the
area preferences, and show the zones layer, that is what customers most
certainly want to see at that point.
It is not a problem in desktop, because there is no scroll bar, but in
mobile you can scroll with touch, and i need the months to snap to the
start for the next and previous buttons to work.
I can use overflow for that in most sizes, but on mobile the buttons
are outside the overflow and are not visible, thus have to revert it
and then remove the right margin to avoid the extra space. Since on
mobile we only show a single slide at a time, the lack of margin is not
noticeable.
Had to change the link to the current language version of the page by a
button, to prevent following a link when trying to expand the submenu.
At first i did this with an `onclick="return false"` bullshit, but the
link was the wrong thing to do here, and it was there only to satisfy
Google et al. They will have to with the links in head.
Also made the link and buttons larger to make it easier to hit them with
finger.
The change to column was from when the button and the text were both on the slide,
but now it only made the text stick to the top, which is the reverse of what we
wanted, but had to increase the space between the text and the booking button.
Customer told us that the minimum number of nights is per campsite type,
not per season. And he wants this, along with the maximum number of
nights, in order to limit the range of departure dates that guests can
choose when booking.
It seems that we have to highlight the map zones too. On the previous
website, they had a mouseover effect that displayed a tooltip, but here
we can not do that because we use the mouse to select accommodations.
This is just a test to see whether Oriol likes how it is shown, thus the
red is likely to change to something else more pleasant to look at.
This does nothing but bring useless work to the browser, that has to
move the SVG group to the top for nothing, as the accommodations do not
overlap anything else.
There are many installations on the map that are drawn with rect
instead of path. I could transform them with Inkscape, but i finally
found out about DOMMatrix, that helps me a lot to convert points, as
it can parse the values of the `transform` attribute.
I also saw that SVGGraphicElements has getCTM() and getScreenCTM(), but
neither of them worked for me: the resulting transformation was “shrunk”
on the map (i.e., like it was scaled down).
This is more or less the same as the campsites, as public information
goes, but for buildings and other amenities that the camping provides
that are not campsites.