Integration Guide
Table Of Contents
- Preface
- How Website Payments Standard Works
- Using Your Merchant Account Profile and Tools
- The Account Profile Summary
- Branding PayPal’s Payment Pages
- Streamlining Purchases with Website Payment Preferences
- Blocking Certain Kinds of Payment
- Adding Your Credit Card Statement Name
- Getting Customer Contact Telephone Numbers
- Language Encoding Your Data
- Multi-User Access to Your PayPal Account
- PayPal-Supported Currencies
- Issuing Refunds
- Single-Item Payment: Buy Now and Donations
- Multiple-Item Payment: Shopping Cart
- Encrypted Website Payments
- Testing in the PayPal Sandbox
- Website Payments Standard HTML FORM Basics
- Website Payments Standard HTML Variables
- Country Codes
- Index
Multiple-Item Payment: Shopping Cart
How A Third-Party Shopping Cart Works
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76 November 2005 Website Payments Standard Checkout Integration Guide
How A Third-Party Shopping Cart Works
This example shows how PayPal can work with a third-party shopping cart and with the
following features:
z Account Optional is turned off. In this example, to pay with PayPal, the customer must
already have a PayPal account. For more information, see “Account Optional or Website
Payments Express” on page 35.”
z Auto Return is enabled. At the end of the transaction, the customer’s browser is
automatically redirected back to the merchant website. For more information, see “Auto
Return” on page 43.
What The Customer Sees
Bob, who has a PayPal account, is buying photos from DesignerFotos. He selects several
photos by clicking Add to Cart.
FIGURE 4.6 Third-party Shopping Cart Example: Add to Cart