For bundled products businesses can limit, or require, the quantity of items purchased.
For example, an airline that offers up to two companion fares for each frequent flyer customer.
In Product Catalog Management, use local and group cardinality to create these quantity
limitation rules.
Local cardinality defines if a product component or products based on a product
classification component are required, are included in the bundle by default, and whether
their quantities can be changed. When the quantity can be changed, use local cardinality
to define the default, minimum and maximum quantities of the product that are allowed in
the product bundle.
Consider a scenario where you want to allow users to purchase up to two double beds. In this
case, define the local cardinality with the minimum quantity as 1, the maximum quantity as 2,
and the default quantity as 1. With this cardinality, if users enter quantity 3, they’re
notified that they can add only up to two beds.
Group Cardinality
Group cardinality defines the minimum and maximum number of
child components that users can add at run time. You can add a nested child group, a product
classification, or multiple product components to a root group.
Consider a scenario where you have a group of 4 types of beds and you want to allow users to
select a minimum of 1 bed and a maximum of 3 beds. In this case, define the group cardinality
with the minimum components as 1 and the maximum components as 3.
Manage Local Cardinality Use local cardinality to define if a product component or products based on a product classification are required, are included in the bundle by default, whether their quantities can be changed, and what the minimum and maximum quantities are.
Manage Group Cardinality Bundled products are grouped under product groups. You can control the number of components that can be added to the bundle hierarchy in the runtime through product group cardinality.
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