Hi @nomadarod
And bout the Stripe plans that I create, do I need to be very specific and/or even have a corresponding product page in stripe’s end? In order to be SCA compliant, I mean?
That’s a fair question but I’m afraid it’s not to us. We are not qualified to give any legal or law-related advise (personally, I don’t even have much of knowledge in that area) and that actually goes way outside the “technical aspects of Forminator”.
So as much as I’d love to give you response to that, I’m afraid I’m not really able to.
For example, as the price is a variable in forminator’s end, do I need to create a plan for each combination possible (product one x1; product one x2; product two x1, etc?). What is the point of these plans?
Point of plans is to provide you with some additional “flexibility” of charging different fees and you may use them but you don’t have to – that depends on your needs.
For example:
1. you only have a single, fixed price on the form – you don’t need multiple plans, you just create one plan and set it to “fixed” amount
2. you have price that may vary but that’s based on the choices that may be calculated based on other fields (for example “How many items?” where single item prices is fixed) – again, you only need single plan which is set to “variable” and the source of the amount is your calculation field
3. but you may also need to have
a) a mix of fixed and variable prices depending on form choices
b) and eg. amounts that vary but based on “incalculable” fields or in some sort of “impossible” calculations where you actually need to have two different calculation fields to be source of amount – in which case you set two plans, setting different calculation as source and make them conditionally processed.
I don’t have a simple “real life” example scenario in my head at this very moment but in general – plans usually come to play when you need to “conditionally decide” how much to charge based on some criteria that cannot be or are difficult to be handled by a simple calculation.
I hope that makes some sense.
Best regards,
Adam