With browserify you can use this library in the browser as well. Be aware that you should not bundle your private API keys for public websites though.
Writing your own client? Checkout the raw HTTP service.
Make sure to subscribe to our mailling list for deprecation notices, API changes and new features, or you can watch this repository for changes.
An API key can be obtained by creating a merchant and adding an app through our dashboard. If your app's target audience is third parties, please reach out and we will make your app's API key hidden.
npm install paylike --save
var paylike = require('paylike')(appKey);
// change key for authentication
.setKey(key)
// create an app (requires no authentication)
apps.create(opts) -> Promise(app)
// fetch current app (based on key)
apps.findOne() -> Promise(app)
// list app's merchants
apps.merchants.find(appId) -> Cursor(merchants)
merchants.create(opts) -> Promise(merchantId)
merchants.update(merchantId, opts) -> Promise
merchants.findOne(merchantId) -> Promise(merchant)
merchants.users.add(merchantId, opts) -> Promise
merchants.users.revoke(merchantId, userId) -> Promise
merchants.users.find(merchantId) -> Cursor(users)
merchants.apps.add(merchantId, opts) -> Promise
merchants.apps.revoke(merchantId, appId) -> Promise
merchants.apps.find(merchantId) -> Cursor(apps)
merchants.lines.find(merchantId) -> Cursor(lines)
merchants.transactions.create(merchantId, opts) -> Promise(transactionId)
merchants.transactions.find(merchantId) -> Cursor(transactions)
transactions.capture(transactionId, opts) -> Promise
transactions.refund(transactionId, opts) -> Promise
transactions.void(transactionId, opts) -> Promise
transactions.findOne(transactionId) -> Promise(transaction)
cards.create(merchantId, opts) -> Promise(cardId)
cards.findOne(cardId) -> Promise(card)
A webshop would typically need only capture
, refund
and void
. Some might
as well use transactions.findOne
and for recurring subscriptions
transactions.create
.
All asynchronous methods will return promises or accept a callback as the last argument (node style).
The Promise implementation is Bluebird and you can utilize all of their API.
// Promise style
paylike.transactions.capture(transactionIdA, {
amount: 100,
})
.then(function(){
// capture is successfully done
}, function(){
// capture failed
});
// Callback style
paylike.transactions.refund(transactionIdB, {
amount: 100,
}, function( err ){
if (err)
return console.error(err); // refund failed
// refund was successful
});
after(id) -> cursor
since(Date) -> cursor
before(id) -> cursor
until(Date) -> cursor
limit(limit) -> cursor
// keep the stream open and poll each `delay` ms
keepAlive([delay]) -> pull stream
toArray -> Promise(Array)
// convenience for pull(cursor, ...)
pull(streamA, streamB...) -> pull stream
All find
methods return cursors.
A cursor is a pull-stream wrapping the requested data. It polls the server in batches as needed.
If you do not already know about pull streams, I would like to encourage you to read Dominic Tarr's introduction.
If you specify a starting point using before()
you will get the newest
objects first (which is also the default), but using after
you will receive
them in reverse order. This fits nicely into the stream pattern and infinite
lists that expand in both directions.
The rationale for using after
/before
as opposed to skip
is to achieve
stable lists and reliable data synchronization.
var cursor = paylike.transactions.find(merchantId);
// get a promise for an array of the last 5 transactions
cursor.limit(5).toArray();
var pull = require('pull-stream');
// print all transactions
pull(
paylike.transactions.find(merchantId),
pull.log()
)
// live stream transaction amounts as they occur
pull(
paylike.transactions.find(merchantId)
.since(new Date())
.keepAlive(),
pull.map(t => t.currency+' '+t.amount),
pull.log()
)
// stream all transactions to a HTTP response (interop with a classic Node.js
// stream)
var toStream = require('pull-stream-to-stream');
toStream(paylike.transactions.find(merchantId))
.pipe(JSONStream.stringify())
.pipe(response);
The API will throw errors when things do not fly. All errors inherit from
PaylikeError
. A very verbose example of catching all types of errors:
paylike.transactions.capture(transactionId, {
amount: 100,
currency: 'EUR',
})
.catch(paylike.NotFoundError, function(){
console.error('The transaction was not found');
})
.catch(paylike.AuthorizationError, paylike.PermissionsError, function(){
console.error('The API key does not have access to the transaction');
})
.catch(paylike.ValidationError, function( e ){
console.error('The capture failed:', e.data);
})
.catch(paylike.PaylikeError, function( e ){
console.error('Something went wrong', e);
});
In most cases catching NotFoundError
and ValidationError
as client errors
and logging PaylikeError
would suffice.
paylike.transactions.capture(transactionId, {
amount: 1200,
currency: 'USD',
descriptor: 'Awesome #5011',
})
.then(function(){
console.log('Captured USD 12.00 appearing as "Awesome #5011" on customers bank statement');
});