This library is deprecated and is here for reference only. Please use the stripe-android library instead. To use the stripe android library with Bongloy, change the following code in StripeApiHandler.java
private static final String LIVE_API_BASE = "https://api.bongloy.com";
Stripe-android makes it easy to collect credit card information without having sensitive details touch your server.
These Stripe Android bindings can be used to generate tokens in your Android application. If you are building an Android application that charges a credit card, you should use stripe-android to make sure you don't pass credit card information to your server (and, so, are PCI compliant).
No need to clone the repository or download any files -- just add this line to your app's build.gradle
inside the dependencies
section:
compile 'com.github.bongloy:bongloy-android:-SNAPSHOT@arr'
Make sure you also have the jitpack
and marven
repositories defined in the repositories
section:
allprojects {
repositories {
maven { url 'https://jitpack.io' }
maven { url "https://maven.google.com" }
}
}
Note - as Google has stopped supporting Eclipse for Android Development, we will no longer be actively testing the project's compatibility within Eclipse. You may still clone and include the library as you would any other Android library project.
You can add a single-line widget to your apps that easily handles the UI states for collecting card data.
First, add the CardInputWidget to your layout.
<com.stripe.android.view.CardInputWidget
android:id="@+id/card_input_widget"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="wrap_content"
/>
Note: the minimum width for this widget is 320dp. The widget also requires an ID to ensure proper layout on rotation, so if you don't do this, we assign one for you when the object is instantiated.
Once this widget is in your layout, you can read the Card
object simply by asking the widget. You'll be given a null
object if the card data is invalid according to our client-side checks.
Card cardToSave = mCardInputWidget.getCard();
if (cardToSave == null) {
mErrorDialogHandler.showError("Invalid Card Data");
return;
}
You can add a Material-style multiline widget to your apps that handles card data collection as well. This can be added in a layout similar to the CardInputWidget
.
<com.stripe.android.view.CardMultilineWidget
android:id="@+id/card_multiline_widget"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="wrap_content"
app:shouldShowPostalCode="true"
/>
Note: a CardMultiline
widget can only be added in the view of an Activity
whose Theme
descends from an AppCompat
theme.
In order to use the app:shouldShowPostalCode
tag, you'll need to enable the app XML namespace somewhere in the layout.
Note: We currently only support US ZIP in the postal code field.
xmlns:app="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res-auto"
To get a Card
object from the CardMultilineWidget
, you ask the widget for its card, just like the CardInputWidget
.
Card cardToSave = mCardMultilineWidget();
if (cardToSave == null) {
mErrorDialogHandler.showError("Invalid Card Data");
return;
}
If the returned Card
is null, error states will show on the fields that need to be fixed.
Once you have a non-null Card
object from either widget, you can call createToken.
A publishable key is required to identify your website when communicating with Stripe. Remember to replace the test key with your live key in production.
You can get all your keys from your account page. This tutorial explains this flow in more detail.
new Stripe(context, "YOUR_PUBLISHABLE_KEY");
or
new Stripe(context).setDefaultPublishableKey("YOUR_PUBLISHABLE_KEY");
createToken converts sensitive card data to a single-use token which you can safely pass to your server to charge the user. The tutorial explains this flow in more detail.
stripe.createToken(
new Card("4242424242424242", 12, 2013, "123"),
tokenCallback
);
The first argument to createToken is a Card object. A Card contains the following fields:
- number: card number as a string without any separators, e.g. '4242424242424242'.
- expMonth: integer representing the card's expiration month, e.g. 12.
- expYear: integer representing the card's expiration year, e.g. 2013.
The following field is optional but recommended to help prevent fraud:
- cvc: card security code as a string, e.g. '123'.
The following fields are entirely optional — they cannot result in a token creation failing:
- name: cardholder name.
- addressLine1: billing address line 1.
- addressLine2: billing address line 2.
- addressCity: billing address city.
- addressState: billing address state.
- addressZip: billing zip as a string, e.g. '94301'.
- addressCountry: billing address country.
The second argument tokenCallback is a callback you provide to handle responses from Stripe. It should send the token to your server for processing onSuccess, and notify the user onError.
Here's a sample implementation of the token callback:
stripe.createToken(
card,
new TokenCallback() {
public void onSuccess(Token token) {
// Send token to your own web service
MyServer.chargeToken(token);
}
public void onError(Exception error) {
Toast.makeText(getContext(),
error.getLocalizedMessage(),
Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
}
}
);
createToken
is an asynchronous call – it returns immediately and invokes the callback on the UI thread when it receives a response from Stripe's servers.
The createTokenSynchronous
method allows you to handle threading on your own, using any IO framework you choose. In particular, you can now create a token using RxJava or an IntentService. Note: do not call this method on the main thread or your app will crash!
Observable<Token> tokenObservable =
Observable.fromCallable(
new Callable<Token>() {
@Override
public Token call() throws Exception {
// When executed, this method will conduct i/o on whatever thread it is run on
return stripe.createTokenSynchronous(cardToCharge);
}
});
tokenObservable
.subscribeOn(Schedulers.io())
.observeOn(AndroidSchedulers.mainThread())
.doOnSubscribe(
new Action0() {
@Override
public void call() {
// Show a progress dialog if you prefer
showProgressDialog();
}
})
.doOnUnsubscribe(
new Action0() {
@Override
public void call() {
// Close the progress dialog if you opened one
closeProgressDialog();
}
})
.subscribe(
new Action1<Token>() {
@Override
public void call(Token token) {
// Send token to your own web service
MyServer.chargeToken(token);
}
},
new Action1<Throwable>() {
@Override
public void call(Throwable throwable) {
// Tell the user about the error
handleError(throwable.getLocalizedMessage());
}
});
You can invoke the following from your code (where cardToSave
is some Card object that you have created.)
Intent tokenServiceIntent = TokenIntentService.createTokenIntent(
mActivity,
cardToSave.getNumber(),
cardToSave.getExpMonth(),
cardToSave.getExpYear(),
cardToSave.getCVC(),
mPublishableKey);
mActivity.startService(tokenServiceIntent);
Your IntentService can then perform the following in its onHandleIntent
method.
@Override
protected void onHandleIntent(Intent intent) {
String errorMessage = null;
Token token = null;
if (intent != null) {
String cardNumber = intent.getStringExtra(EXTRA_CARD_NUMBER);
Integer month = (Integer) intent.getExtras().get(EXTRA_MONTH);
Integer year = (Integer) intent.getExtras().get(EXTRA_YEAR);
String cvc = intent.getStringExtra(EXTRA_CVC);
String publishableKey = intent.getStringExtra(EXTRA_PUBLISHABLE_KEY);
Card card = new Card(cardNumber, month, year, cvc);
Stripe stripe = new Stripe();
try {
token = stripe.createTokenSynchronous(card, publishableKey);
} catch (StripeException stripeEx) {
errorMessage = stripeEx.getLocalizedMessage();
}
}
Intent localIntent = new Intent(TOKEN_ACTION);
if (token != null) {
// extract whatever information you want from your Token object
localIntent.putExtra(STRIPE_CARD_LAST_FOUR, token.getCard().getLast4());
localIntent.putExtra(STRIPE_CARD_TOKEN_ID, token.getId());
}
if (errorMessage != null) {
localIntent.putExtra(STRIPE_ERROR_MESSAGE, errorMessage);
}
// Broadcasts the Intent to receivers in this app.
LocalBroadcastManager.getInstance(this).sendBroadcast(localIntent);
}
Registering a local BroadcastReceiver in your activity then allows you to handle the results.
private class TokenBroadcastReceiver extends BroadcastReceiver {
private TokenBroadcastReceiver() { }
@Override
public void onReceive(Context context, Intent intent) {
mProgressDialogController.finishProgress();
if (intent == null) {
return;
}
if (intent.hasExtra(TokenIntentService.STRIPE_ERROR_MESSAGE)) {
// handle your error!
return;
}
if (intent.hasExtra(TokenIntentService.STRIPE_CARD_TOKEN_ID) &&
intent.hasExtra(TokenIntentService.STRIPE_CARD_LAST_FOUR)) {
// handle your resulting token here
}
}
}
}
The Card object allows you to validate user input before you send the information to Stripe.
Checks that the number is formatted correctly and passes the Luhn check.
Checks whether or not the expiration date represents an actual month in the future.
Checks whether or not the supplied number could be a valid verification code.
Convenience method to validate card number, expiry date and CVC.
There are 2 example apps included in the repository:
- Example project is a simple example of different ways to connect our components, including how to make tokens and sources, how to connect the synchronous and asynchronous methods, and how to use the CardInputWidget.
- SampleStore project is a full walk-through of building a shop activity, including connecting to a back end.
To build and run the example apps, clone the repository and open the project. Running "example" will run the Example application, and running "samplestore" will run the shop activity.
Note: both example apps require an Android SDK and Gradle to build and run.
- Clone the git repository.
- Be sure you've installed the Android SDK with API Level 17 and android-support-v4. This is only a requirement for development. Our bindings require the API Level 7 as a minimum at runtime which would work on almost any modern version of Android.
- Import the project.
- For Android Studio, choose Import Project... from the "Welcome to Android Studio" screen. Select the
build.gradle
file at the top of thestripe-android
repository. - For Eclipse, import the example and stripe folders into, by using
Import -> General -> Existing Projects into Workspace
, and browsing to thestripe-android
folder.
- For Android Studio, choose Import Project... from the "Welcome to Android Studio" screen. Select the
- Build and run the project on your device or in the Android emulator.
The example application needs a public key from your Stripe account to interact with the Stripe API. To add this, replace the value of PUBLISHABLE_KEY in LauncherActivity with your test key.
Three different ways of creating tokens are shown, with all the Stripe-specific logic needed for each separated into the three controllers, AsyncTaskTokenController, RxTokenController, and IntentServiceTokenController.
Before you can run the SampleStore application or use the CustomerSessionActivity in the example application, you need to provide it with your Stripe publishable key and a sample backend.
- If you haven't already, sign up for a Stripe account (it takes seconds). Then go to https://dashboard.stripe.com/account/apikeys.
- Replace the
PUBLISHABLE_KEY
constant in StoreActivity.java (where it says "put your publishable key here") with your Test Publishable Key. - Head to https://github.com/stripe/example-ios-backend and click "Deploy to Heroku" (you may have to sign up for a Heroku account as part of this process). Provide your Stripe test secret key for the STRIPE_TEST_SECRET_KEY field under 'Env'. Click "Deploy for Free".
- Replace the
BASE_URL
variable (where it says "Put your backend URL here") in the RetrofitFactory.java file with the app URL Heroku provides you with (e.g. "https://my-example-app.herokuapp.com")
After this is done, you can make test payments through the app and see them in your Stripe dashboard. Head to https://stripe.com/docs/testing#cards for a list of test card numbers.
See MIGRATING.md