A simple Ember wrapper for Stripe Elements.
- Inject
<script src="https://js.stripe.com/v3/"></script>
into your application's<body>
- Initialize
Stripe
with your publishable key - Inject a
stripev3
service into your controllers so you can use: - Simple, configurable Ember components like
{{stripe-card}}
(demoed in the gif above)
$ ember install ember-stripe-elements
You must set your publishable key in config/environment.js
.
ENV.stripe = {
publishableKey: 'pk_thisIsATestKey'
};
You can configure Stripe.js to lazy load when you need it.
ENV.stripe = {
lazyLoad: true
};
When enabled, Stripe.js will not be loaded until you call the load()
function on the service. It's best to call this function in a route's beforeModel
hook.
// subscription page route
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
import { inject as service } from '@ember/service';
export default Route.extend({
stripe: service('stripev3'),
beforeModel() {
return this.get('stripe').load();
}
});
Every component will:
- Accept the same array of
options
accepted by Stripe Elements - Call
update
on the Stripeelement
if theoptions
are updated - Bubble the proper JavaScript events into actions
- Mount Stripe's own
StripeElement
in a<div role="mount-point">
ondidInsertElement
- Unmount on
willDestroyElement
- Provide access to the
stripev3
service - Have the base CSS class name
.ember-stripe-element
- Have a CSS class for the specific element that matches the component's name, e.g.
{{ember-stripe-card}}
has the class.ember-stripe-card
- Yield to a block
- Accept
autofocus=true
passed directly in the component, e.g.{{stripe-card autofocus=true}}
Every component extends from a
StripeElement
base component which is not exposed to your application.
The components bubble up all of the JavaScript events that can be handled by the Stripe Element in element.on()
from the Ember component using the following actions:
blur
change
(also sets/unsets thestripeError
property on the component, which can be yielded with the block)focus
You could handle these actions yourself, for example:
This addon gives you components that match the different Element types:
{{stripe-card}}
-card
(recommended) A flexible single-line input that collects all necessary card details.{{stripe-card-number}}
-cardNumber
The card number.{{stripe-card-expiry}}
-cardExpiry
The card's expiration date.{{stripe-card-cvc}}
-cardCvc
The card's CVC number.{{stripe-postal-code}}
-postalCode
the ZIP/postal code.
In addition to the simple usage above, like {{stripe-card}}
, you can also yield to a block, which will yield both an stripeError
object and the stripeElement
itself.
For example, you can choose to render out the stripeError
, as below (runnable in our dummy app).
Also notice the submit
action which passes the stripeElement
; you could define this in your controller like so:
import Ember from 'ember';
const { Controller, get, inject: { service }, set } = Ember;
export default Controller.extend({
stripev3: service(),
options: {
hidePostalCode: true,
style: {
base: {
color: '#333'
}
}
},
token: null,
actions: {
submit(stripeElement) {
let stripe = get(this, 'stripev3');
stripe.createToken(stripeElement).then(({token}) => {
set(this, 'token', token);
});
}
}
});
Note the naming convention stripeElement
instead of element
, as this could conflict with usage of element
in an Ember component.
Note that you can use CSS to style some aspects of the components, but keep in mind that the styles
object of the options
takes precedence.
Fork this repo, make a new branch, and send a pull request. Please add tests in order to have your change merged.
git clone [email protected]:code-corps/ember-stripe-elements.git
cd ember-stripe-elements
npm install
ember serve
Visit your app at http://localhost:4200.
ember test
There are self-signed certs in /ssl
that will allow you to test autofill inside of the dummy app (or serve as a blueprint for doing this yourself in your own app).
To run using the self-signed certificate, you must:
- Add
127.0.0.1 localhost.ssl
to yourhosts
file - Run the app with
ember serve --ssl
- Add the certificate to your keychain and trust it for SSL
- Visit the app at https://localhost.ssl:4200.
ember build
For more information on using ember-cli, visit https://ember-cli.com/.
Thanks to @begedin, @snewcomer, @filipecrosk, and @Kilowhisky for your early help on this!