Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
135 lines (94 loc) · 4.78 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

135 lines (94 loc) · 4.78 KB

angular-stripe Build Status

Angular provider for easy interaction with Stripe.js. angular-stripe wraps Stripe.js's async operations in $q promises, making response handling easier and eliminating $scope.$apply calls and other repetitive boilerplate in your application. Check out angular-credit-cards for validating your credit card forms. angular-stripe is powered by stripe-as-promised.

Setup

# use npm
$ npm install --save angular-stripe
# or bower
$ bower install --save angular-stripe

For Angular 1.2 support, you'll need to load angular-q-constructor first.

angular-stripe expects Stripe.js to be available as window.Stripe when it loads.

// node module exports the string 'angular-stripe' for convenience
angular.module('myApp', [
  require('angular-stripe')
]);
// otherwise, include the code first then the module name
angular.module('myApp', [
  'angular-stripe'
]);

API

stripeProvider

angular-stripe exposes stripeProvider for configuring Stripe.js.

stripeProvider.setPublishableKey(key) -> undefined

Sets your Stripe publishable key.

angular
  .module('myApp', [
    'angular-stripe'
  ])
  .config(function (stripeProvider) {
    stripeProvider.setPublishableKey('my_key');
  });

stripe

Inject stripe into your services or controllers to access the API methods. createToken returns a $q promise. If Stripe responds with an error, the promise will be rejected.


stripe.setPublishableKey(key) -> undefined

Same as stripeProvider.setPublishableKey


stripe.card

stripe.card.createToken(card [, params]) -> promise

Tokenizes a card using Stripe.card.createToken. You can optionally pass a key property under params to use a different publishable key than the default to create that token. This is especially useful for applications using Stripe Connect.

The following utility methods are also exposed:


stripe.bankAccount

stripe.bankAccount.createToken(bankAccount [, params]) -> promise

Tokenizes a card using Stripe.bankAccount.createToken.

The following utility methods are also exposed:


stripe.bitcoinReceiver

stripe.bitcoinReceiver.createReceiver -> promise

Creates a bitcoin receiver using Stripe.bitcoinReceiver.createReceiver.

stripe.bitcoinReceiver.pollReceiver -> promise

Polls a bitcoin receiver using Stripe.bitcoinReceiver.pollReceiver. Note that you'll need to implement additional logic if you need to cancel receivers.

The following utility methods are also exposed:


Examples

Charging a card

app.controller('PaymentController', function ($scope, $http, stripe) {
  $scope.charge = function () {
    return stripe.card.createToken($scope.payment.card)
      .then(function (response) {
        console.log('token created for card ending in ', response.card.last4);
        var payment = angular.copy($scope.payment);
        payment.card = void 0;
        payment.token = response.id;
        return $http.post('https://yourserver.com/payments', payment);
      })
      .then(function (payment) {
        console.log('successfully submitted payment for $', payment.amount);
      })
      .catch(function (err) {
        if (err.type && /^Stripe/.test(err.type)) {
          console.log('Stripe error: ', err.message);
        }
        else {
          console.log('Other error occurred, possibly with your API', err.message);
        }
      });
  };
});