When placing an order, a customer chooses an item
and then selects the different available options
. The options
available for an item are defined by the menu, while the way the options are selected is defined by the pick
object.
There are three ways in which a customer can pick options:
Customers can choose an exact number of modifier options for an item as defined in the exactly
attribute. For example: a customer orders a coffee and is prompted to "pick" a size. They should be able to choose exactly 1 of the options (small, medium, or large), and should only be able to choose it once.
"pick": {
"exactly": 1;
"pick_same_option": true;
}
Customers can choose a number of modifier options between a range of two integers. For example, a customer orders toast which has a modifier of extras (cheese and tomato), a Pick set to range
from 0
to 3
, and a pick_same_option
of true
. This allows the customer to order toast with cheese and tomato, or 2x cheese and 1 tomato, or 1 cheese and 2x tomato.
"pick": {
"range": {
"from": 0;
"to": 3;
}
"pick_same_option": true;
}
Customers can choose as many modifier options as they'd like, with no limit. The only restriction might be picking the same option more than once if pick_same_option
is set to false.
"pick": {
"pick_same_option": false;
}