Write Visual Basic (for an Office/VBA application NOT a website) to integration with [login to view URL] CIM SOAP APIs. I have sufficient expertise in my application to deal with passing data and constructing strings etc, but insufficient expertise in calling web services from VBA and handling responses and errors, so I need the requisite classes and module code to handle this. I am unable to get Microsoft's Web Services References Tool to generate the proxy classes.
## Deliverables
I need the wrapper code and handling logic inside VB for the services in this document (except the ARB ones) - the WSDL/References can be found here:
| **ITEM** | **LOCATION** |
| Web Service URL in Production | [login to view URL] |
| Web Service URL in Developer Test | [login to view URL] |
| WSDL | [[login to view URL]][1] |
and the full documentation here:
[[login to view URL]][2]
I can wrap the code around this to pass in values etc, but I have no idea how to call and respond to (and deal with errors from) web services from within VBA (this will end up in a MS Access application).
I am having no success using the Microsoft Web Services Reference Toolkit to generate the stub code, and frankly I would rather have a developer that knows what they're doing create the basic framework. Once I get it, I can enhance it, fix it, change it etc, but I need the basic shell created. I realize you probably won't be able to really test it with real data but if you can create the handling code (including errors) and the shell, I can probably figure out the rest.
My application is a MS Access customer management application, but to protect my customers from fraud/theft, I cannot keep their credit card numbers locally. These APIs allow me to store those profiles at [login to view URL] and just reference a mapping customer id so I can charge credit cards etc without having to store the data locally.
NOTE: this is NOT a website project. I need the web service calls and handling logic (including error handling) to be in Visual Basic for Applications so that they can run inside a Microsoft Access 2002 (XP) program NOT from a vb.net website.
* * *This broadcast message was sent to all bidders on Monday Apr 21, 2008 3:53:20 PM:
Thank you for your bids. I am awaiting clarification of some specifics from [login to view URL] and I will post an update by the end of the week on our intention to proceed, and notify the bidders. Thank you for your patience.