learn unix and linux commands

Enterprise Architecture in Interesting Times

 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
# 1  
Old 02-21-2011
Enterprise Architecture in Interesting Times

Business and technology continue to shape enterprise architecture.

More...
Login or Register to Ask a Question

Previous Thread | Next Thread

1 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. News, Links, Events and Announcements

A seriously interesting article about fab times.

Not sure if this is the right forum but...... This is an article about the difficulties in the engineering of 14nM fabs and lower production techniques. Semiconductor Engineering .:. Battling Fab Cycle Times Enjoy... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: wisecracker
1 Replies
Login or Register to Ask a Question
Business::PayPal::API::TransactionSearch(3pm)		User Contributed Perl Documentation	     Business::PayPal::API::TransactionSearch(3pm)

NAME
Business::PayPal::API::TransactionSearch - PayPal TransactionSearch API SYNOPSIS
use Business::PayPal::API::TransactionSearch; ## see Business::PayPal::API documentation for parameters my $pp = new Business::PayPal::API::TransactionSearch ( ... ); my %response = $pp->TransactionSearch( StartDate => '1998-01-01T00:00:00Z', TransactionID => $transid, ); DESCRIPTION
Business::PayPal::API::TransactionSearch implements PayPal's TransactionSearch API using SOAP::Lite to make direct API calls to PayPal's SOAP API server. It also implements support for testing via PayPal's sandbox. Please see Business::PayPal::API for details on using the PayPal sandbox. TransactionSearch Implements PayPal's TransactionSearch API call. Supported parameters include: StartDate (required) EndDate Payer Receiver TransactionID PayerName AuctionItemNumber InvoiceID TransactionClass Amount CurrencyCode Status as described in the PayPal "Web Services API Reference" document. The syntax for StartDate is: YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SSZ 'T' and 'Z' are literal characters 'T' and 'Z' respectively, e.g.: 2005-12-22T08:51:28Z Returns a list reference containing up to 100 matching records (as per the PayPal Web Services API). Each record is a hash reference with the following fields: Timestamp Timezone Type Payer PayerDisplayName TransactionID Status GrossAmount FeeAmount NetAmount Example: my $records = $pp->TransactionSearch( StartDate => '2006-03-21T22:29:55Z', InvoiceID => '599294993', ); for my $rec ( @$records ) { print "Record: "; print "TransactionID: " . $rec->{TransactionID} . " "; print "Payer Email: " . $rec->{Payer} . " "; print "Amount: " . $rec->{GrossAmount} . " "; } ERROR HANDLING See the ERROR HANDLING section of Business::PayPal::API for information on handling errors. EXPORT None by default. SEE ALSO
<https://developer.paypal.com/en_US/pdf/PP_APIReference.pdf> AUTHOR
Scot Wiersdorf <scott@perlcode.org> COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2006 by Scott Wiersdorf This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.5 or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available. perl v5.14.2 2009-12-07 Business::PayPal::API::TransactionSearch(3pm)