Angular 2+ wrapper for StripeJS
- Stripe Service
- Lazy script loading
To install this library, run:
$ npm install ngx-stripe --save
Import the NgxStripeModule
into the application
The module takes the same parameters as the global Stripe object. The APIKey and the optional options to use Stripe connect
- apiKey: string
- options: { stripeAccount?: string; }
import { BrowserModule } from '@angular/platform-browser';
import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';
import { AppComponent } from './app.component';
// Import your library
import { NgxStripeModule } from 'ngx-stripe';
@NgModule({
declarations: [
AppComponent
],
imports: [
BrowserModule,
NgxStripeModule.forRoot({
apiKey: '***your-stripe-publishable key***'
}),
LibraryModule
],
providers: [],
bootstrap: [AppComponent]
})
export class AppModule { }
Once imported, you can inject the StripeService anywhere you need. The stripe script will be loaded the first time the service is injected.
The stripe service exposes the same methods as the StripeJS instance but with typescript types. The API is based on Observables so it can be combined with other actions.
In the example below, the component mounts the card in the OnInit lifecycle. The buy button creates a Stripe token the could be sent to the server for further actions. In this example we just log that token to the console:
Example component (more HTML and CSS examples can be found at the Stripe Elements Examples):
<form novalidate (ngSubmit)="buy($event)" [formGroup]="stripeTest">
<input type="text" formControlName="name" placeholder="Jane Doe">
<div id="card-element" class="field" #card></div>
<button type="submit">
BUY
</button>
</form>
import { Component, OnInit, ViewChild, ElementRef } from '@angular/core';
import { FormGroup, FormBuilder, Validators } from "@angular/forms";
import { StripeService, Elements, Element as StripeElement } from "ngx-stripe";
@Component({
selector: 'app-stripe-test',
templateUrl: 'stripe.html'
})
export class StripeTestComponent implements OnInit {
elements: Elements;
card: StripeElement;
@ViewChild('card') cardRef: ElementRef;
stripeTest: FormGroup;
constructor(
private fb: FormBuilder,
private stripeService: StripeService) {}
ngOnInit() {
this.stripeTest = this.fb.group({
name: ['', [Validators.required]]
});
this.stripeService.elements()
.subscribe(elements => {
this.elements = elements;
// Only mount the element the first time
if (!this.card) {
this.card = this.elements.create('card', {
style: {
base: {
iconColor: '#666EE8',
color: '#31325F',
lineHeight: '40px',
fontWeight: 300,
fontFamily: '"Helvetica Neue", Helvetica, sans-serif',
fontSize: '18px',
'::placeholder': {
color: '#CFD7E0'
}
}
}
});
this.card.mount(this.cardRef.nativeElement);
}
});
}
buy() {
const name = this.stripeTest.get('name').value;
this.stripeService
.createToken(this.card, { name })
.subscribe(token => {
if (result.token) {
// Use the token to create a charge or a customer
// https://stripe.com/docs/charges
console.log(result.token);
} else if (result.error) {
// Error creating the token
console.log(result.error.message);
}
});
}
}
The following command runs unit & integration tests that are in the tests
folder, and unit tests that are in src
folder:
npm test
The following command:
npm run build
- starts TSLint with Codelyzer
- starts AoT compilation using ngc compiler
- creates
dist
folder with all the files of distribution
To test the npm package locally, use the following command:
npm run pack-lib
You can then run the following to install it in an app to test it:
npm install [path]to-library-[version].tgz
npm run publish-lib
To generate the documentation, this starter uses compodoc:
npm run compodoc
npm run compodoc-serve
MIT © Ricardo Sánchez Gregorio