Store Page Tour Print

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The Store page combines products from configured storefront endpoints into one unified catalog. It shows category filter pills, product cards, pricing options, media, and direct action buttons for purchase or contact workflows.

When to Use This

  • You want to understand what the Store page actually does.
  • You need to explain the storefront interface to another operator or customer.
  • You want to know how category filters and product cards work.
  • You want to confirm whether the page is showing real storefront data.

What the Store Page Contains

  • a top filter bar with All Products and category filter pills
  • product cards in a storefront grid
  • category chips on each product
  • pricing for hosted, self-hosted, or source-code offers when available
  • media galleries in the item modal
  • action buttons such as Telegram, YouTube, or purchase links

How to Use It

  1. Open Store from the sidebar.
  2. Start with All Products to see the full catalog.
  3. Use the category filter pills to narrow the visible products.
  4. Open a product modal to see fuller pricing, description, media, and action buttons.
  5. If you own the panel, use the admin controls to switch into store editing or endpoint management when needed.

Expected Result

You should be able to browse the available catalog, narrow it by category, inspect a product in detail, and follow the right action button without confusion.

What Empty Storefronts Look Like

If no storefronts are configured or no data is available, Cockpit shows a clear empty state rather than a broken-looking grid. Owner accounts also see a route back to Manage Storefronts from that state.

Common Mistakes

  • Assuming no products means the page failed: It can simply mean no storefronts are configured or available.
  • Ignoring category chips: The product card already tells you what category the item belongs to.
  • Treating the store like Downloads: Store products, downloads, and modules are related areas but not the same workflow.

Example Use Cases

  • Sales browsing: A reseller uses category filters to jump between product types while helping a customer choose.
  • Owner review: The panel owner opens product modals to confirm pricing and media look correct after endpoint updates.
  • Endpoint troubleshooting: When the store is empty, the owner knows to check storefront configuration rather than the Downloads page.

Related Articles

  • How to Browse and Filter Store Products
  • Admin Page Tour
  • Downloads Page Tour

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