An Elixir library for working with Stripe. With this library you can:
- manage Customers
- Create, list, cancel, update and delete Subscriptions
- Create, list, update and delete Plans
- Create, list, and update Invoices
- Create and retrieve tokens for credit card and bank account
- And yes, run charges with or without an existing Customer
Why another Stripe Library? Currently there are a number of them in the Elixir world that are, well just not "done" yet. I started to fork/help but soon it became clear to me that what I wanted was:
- An existing/better test story
- An API that didn't just mimic a REST interaction
- A library that was up to date with Elixir > 1.0 and would, you know, actually compile.
- Function calls that returned a standard
{:ok, result}
or{:error, message}
response
As I began digging things up with these other libraries it became rather apparent that I was not only tweaking the API, but also ripping out a lot of the existing code... and that usually means I should probably do my own thing. So I did.
I've tested this library against Stripe API v1 and above. The docs are up at Hex
Install the dependency:
{:stripity_stripe, "~> 0.5.0"}
Next, add to your applications:
defp application do
[applications: [:stripity_stripe]]
end
Then create a config folder and add a Stripe secret key:
use Mix.Config
config :stripity_stripe, secret_key: "YOUR SECRET KEY"
Then add Stripe to your supervisor tree or, to play around, make sure you start it up:
Stripe.start
If you start contributing and you want to run mix test, first you need to export STRIPE_SECRET_KEY environment variable in the same shell as the one you will be running mix test in.
export STRIPE_SECRET_KEY="yourkey"
mix test
I've tried to make the API somewhat comprehensive and intuitive. If you'd like to see things in detail be sure to have a look at the tests - they show (generally) the way the API goes together.
In general, if Stripe requires some information for a given API call, you'll find that as part of the arrity of the given function. For instance if you want to delete a Customer, you'll find that you must pass the id along:
{:ok, result} = Stripe.Customers.delete "some_id"
For optional arguments, you can send in a Keyword list that will get translated to parameters. So if you want to update a Subscription, for instance, you must send in the customer_id
and subscription_id
with the list of changes:
#Change customer to the Premium subscription
{:ok, result} = Stripe.Customers.change_subscription "customer_id", "sub_id", plan: "premium"
That's the rule of thumb with this library. If there are any errors with your call, they will bubble up to you in the {:error, message}
match.