You bet. The concept of this tag is to keep your users focused when you need them to do something else first.
This is a common problem in websites. Look at ebay. Say you were looking at a specific item, and you're ready to bid on that item, so you click "sign in". After you sign in, where does it take you? To your user account. Is that where you really wanted to go? Nope, you really wanted to bid on that item, but now you have to find it again and by the time you found it, your time was up and you lost the bid. DAMN EBAY! <cf_returnfuseaction> allows you to store where your users should go when they finish a process. So if they were looking at a specific item on ebay, they could login and automatically return to that page. Or you could have them go somewhere else. This is useful if they were about to bid on an item and they needed to login first. When they were finished logging in, they could complete their bid. This essentially allows you to stick a fuseaction from another circuit into a multi-step process. Here are some example Fuseactions that might explain it a little further. 1) products.viewproduct?product_id=32 2) members.loginform 3) members.login 4) members.loginform (they failed their login) 5) members.login (this time they got it right) 6) products.viewproduct?product_id=32 So now they are back at the product they were looking at, now hopefully they'll buy it! Here's another example, a little more complicated because, plugging a survey in. 1) products.viewproduct?product_id=32 2) purchase.additemtocart?product_id=32 (you have to be logged in first, redirect to loginform) 3) members.loginform 4) members.login 5) members.loginform (they failed their login) 6) members.login (this time they got it right) 7) surveys.surveyform 8) surveys.savesurvey 9) purchase.additemtocart?product_id=32 (they are logged in, now add the item) Steve Nelson hal helms wrote: > Steve, > > Do you want to explain to everyone what the purpose of > <cf_returnfuseaction> is? > > -----Original Message----- > From: Steve Nelson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] > Sent: Monday, April 22, 2002 10:07 AM > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: Re: ReturnFuseaction - in details > > You might want to put this in an act file. Try something like this: > > <cfif not isdefined("client.clientID")> > <cf_returnfuseaction > action="set" > gotourl="index.cfm?fuseaction=members.loginform" > returnurl="#cgi.script_name#?#cgi.query_string#"> > </cfif> > > Then from your members.loginform fuseaction, you would point that to > another fuseaction which would actually log the person in. You might > have another act_login.cfm that looks like this: > > <cfquery name=checklogin....> > select clientid > from users > where email='#attributes.email#' > and password='#attributes.password#' > </cfquery> > <cfif checklogin.recordcount> > <cfset client.clientid=checklogin.clientid> > <cf_returnfuseaction > action="return"> > </cfif> > > Give that a shot. > > Steve Nelson > > Leonardo Crespo wrote: > > > Ok, i will explain in details. I have a fuseaction called > > "addProduct". The user can only add a product if he's loogged in. So, > > the fusebox receives the "addProduct" fuseaction and if the user is > > not logged in, he's sent to the "Login" fuseaction. > > > > What i want is, when the user is logged in sucefully, he's sent back > > to the "addProduct" fuseaction (with a session.loginok or a > > client.clientID). > > > > I cannot hardcode a <cflocation> in the "Login" fuseaction because it > > is used by others fuseactions. > > > > Is this the job of the returnfuseaction tag? > > icq 18506630 > > > ==^================================================================ This email was sent to: [email protected] EASY UNSUBSCRIBE click here: http://topica.com/u/?bUrFMa.bV0Kx9 Or send an email to: [EMAIL PROTECTED] T O P I C A -- Register now to manage your mail! http://www.topica.com/partner/tag02/register ==^================================================================
