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Julie Kuehl
ParticipantOK. I just want to make sure you understand that the attendee list is only available to admins, not to other attendees. At least out of the box. (Pretty much anything is possible with customization.) And with the ticketing function, your “single” button would be purchasing one (free) ticket and then getting an email with the ticket information. If you want to minimize the e-commerce part of it, I’d suggest you take a look at the EDD Tickets option.
— Julie
December 13, 2013 at 5:17 pm in reply to: Can't use WPEngines staging because we don't have a second install… #81705Julie Kuehl
ParticipantHi d20games,
At the top of this page there’s a menu item called “Account Central”. Choose the License Key option and find your site URL and click the link to “Disconnect now”. Then take your license key and add it to the new site and you should be golden.
Let me know if that gives you problems.
— Julie
Julie Kuehl
ParticipantHi Michelle,
The default display for the current release of the plugin should be “Events for [month year]”. Do you have the latest release installed? Version 3.2?
And your hunch regarding the icons may be right as I do know that Ajax can cause hiccups here and there. Have you tried deactivating the other plugins and/or reverting to the TwentyTwelve theme to check for conflicts?
— Julie
Julie Kuehl
ParticipantThat’s an interesting idea actually. Perhaps being able to set an event as a “holiday” that would turn off the other events that day. Would you be willing to add that to our Feature Ideas page? (https://tribe.uservoice.com/forums/195723-feature-ideas)
— Julie
Julie Kuehl
ParticipantYou’re welcome!
— Julie
Julie Kuehl
ParticipantHey Jack,
To add ticketing to events you need only one of our four choices: Eventbrite Tickets, WooCommerce Tickets, EDD Tickets, or WPEC Tickets. Plus you’d need The Events Calendar (free) plugin. If you’ve got a favorite out of those e-commerce solutions, I’d suggest you go with that. If you don’t have a favorite, then I’d suggest you check out their websites for more information. Our plugins simply connect their e-commerce solutions to our calendar for the ticketing function. All the registration/payment/ticketing functions are governed by those partners’ plugins.
Does that help? Do you have any more questions?
— Julie
Julie Kuehl
ParticipantHello Ruth,
Well, to answer your questions:
1. It is not currently responsive, but that is something we are working on offering and hope to have it available soon in an upcoming release.
2. I’m not sure I understand this question, but we don’t solicit anyone with regards to events.
3. That’s actually two questions. So first, with our Community Events add-on you can give users access to manage their own events. There are several configuration options available for that add-on that you might find useful. But as far as stats and reporting of sales goes, you’d have to check with the particular partner you chose for the ticketing function. Our plugin simply ties the calendar to the tickets. The e-commerce vendors handle the checkout and payment process and would be responsible for that data.
Is there anything else I can help you with?
— Julie
Julie Kuehl
Participantadam,
The attendee list has a place where you can check the status of the order. (You can see the WooCommerce Ticket example here http://d.pr/i/2Skq) If it’s completed (and basically, if they’re on the list) they’ve “paid” according to your set up. But the setup would be governed by the ticketing solution you choose. So I’d encourage you to check out the websites of WooCommerce, EDD, or WPEC for the details.
— Julie
Julie Kuehl
ParticipantHi cruxcreative,
Since our ticketing partners plugins would handle the membership, I’d suggest that you take a look at those various options and see which one could best handle your situation. Perhaps Easy Digital Downloads would be one to look at if you are only selling tickets to events. However if you have other products, especially physical products, that you might be selling, then maybe WooCommerce would be the one to explore.
Our ticketing plugins simply connect tickets to events, so it’s going to be one of the partners’ setup that would restrict access to the calendar.
Does that make sense?
— Julie
Julie Kuehl
ParticipantHi hrec2013,
When I gave this a try on my local install it worked to set the recurrence from Aug – Feb and then go to the event that fell on the holiday and set it back to draft mode. It will ask if you want to do that for just the one event or for the whole series, so you are able to eliminate that one session from the front end of the calendar.
Does that do the trick for you?
— Julie
December 12, 2013 at 5:04 pm in reply to: Weekly View some events showing as a blue bar with no text, others show fine?!?! #81510Julie Kuehl
ParticipantHi stmarksitaly,
Well, to our way of thinking all events have a start and end time, almost by definition. So the plugin really doesn’t handle events without end times. It has to put something in there. That’s why if there isn’t something specified in Facebook it’s going to put in the only time it has for that event which is the start time. I don’t think there’s a way around that and I’m not even coming up with a way to alter the code to force a new end time to be inserted. Maybe something like if start time = end time then end time = midnight or some such thing could be possible. But that would take some finesse with the code.
Honestly, I’m not seeing an easy solution to that one. Easiest would be to make sure that the events in Facebook have an end time. But it sounds like that’s not an option.
— Julie
Julie Kuehl
ParticipantHi adam,
No.
Well, let me clarify that. The ticket plugins do require that the FREE The Events Calendar plugin (http://wordpress.org/plugins/the-events-calendar/) be installed. Since the tickets are associated with events, the calendar provides the events. But no, you don’t need to purchase Events Calendar PRO to get the ticketing solutions to work.
Does that clear it up?
— Julie
Julie Kuehl
ParticipantHi B 4liano,
Well… technically it’s one license per install, but there’s a bit of a workaround that could apply here. You could purchase just one license but install the plugin on all of your domains. You can associate the license with only one of those installs, but that gets you access to support and the updates of the plugin. On the one site with the license, those updates can be done through the autoupdate process. However, for the remaining installs you would have to download the plugin and update them manually.
So, no but yes. Is that clear for you?
— Julie
Julie Kuehl
ParticipantHi Jack,
The ticketing options sure do have attendee lists included as part of them. For instance, the WooCommerce Tickets attendee area looks like this: http://d.pr/i/6kHq Notice you can also print the list out if you’d like. So the answer to your first question is yes.
For the second question, you’re talking about linking WordPress with Facebook which might make you think our Facebook Importer add-on might be what you’re looking for. But it is an importer and not able to sync at this time, so it can only grab events from Facebook and put them into WordPress and not the other way round. So the answer to this question is a no for the time being.
Is there anything else I can help you with?
— Julie
Julie Kuehl
ParticipantHi Pat,
Yup. I think what you’re looking for it our Community Event add-on. You can check it out here https://theeventscalendar.com/shop/wordpress-community-events/
Let me know if that does what you need.
— Julie
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