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Overview

Zebra is a library that makes using Stripe with Django even easier.

It's made of:

Pull requests are quite welcome!

Usage

Installation

  1. pip install django-zebra

  2. Edit your settings.py:

    INSTALLED_APPS += ("zebra",)
    STRIPE_SECRET = "YOUR-SECRET-API-KEY"
    STRIPE_PUBLISHABLE = "YOUR-PUBLISHABLE-API-KEY"
    # Set any optional settings (below)
    
  3. (optional) ./manage.py syncdb if you have ZEBRA_ENABLE_APP = True

  4. (optional) Add in the webhook urls:

    urlpatterns += patterns('',          
    	url(r'zebra/',   include('zebra.urls',  namespace="zebra",  app_name='zebra') ),
    )
    
  5. Enjoy easy billing.

Optional Settings:

Webhooks

Zebra handles all the webhooks that stripe sends back and calls a set of signals that you can plug your app into. To use the webhooks:

Note: The initial Stripe webhook system is being deprecated. See below for a description of Zebra's support for the new system.

Zebra provides:

All of the webhooks provide the same arguments:

So, for example, to update the customer's new billing date after a successful payment, you could:

(assuming you've set ZEBRA_CUSTOMER_MODEL or are using ZEBRA_ENABLE_APP):

from zebra.signals import zebra_webhook_recurring_payment_succeeded

def update_last_invoice_date(sender, **kwargs):
	customer = kwargs.pop("customer", None)
	full_json = kwargs.pop("full_json", None)
	customer.billing_date = full_json.date
	customer.save()

zebra_webhook_recurring_payment_succeeded.connect(update_last_invoice_date)

Webhooks Update

Stripe recently updated their webhook implementation (see https://stripe.com/blog/webhooks). Zebra includes an implementation of the new system.

Zebra provides:

Zebra also provides an easy map of all the signals as zebra.signals.WEBHOOK_MAP, which maps events (charge_succeeded) to the Zebra signal (zebra_webhook_charge_succeeded). To assign a handler to all the signals that zebra sends, for example, loop over the items in the map:

for event_key, webhook_signal in WEBHOOK_MAP.iteritems():
    webhook_signal.connect(webhook_logger)

Forms

The StripePaymentForm sets up a form with fields like the official stripe example.

In particular, the form is stripped of the name attribute for any of the credit card fields, to prevent accidental submission. Media is also provided to set up stripe.js (it assumes you have jQuery).

Use it in a view like so:

if request.method == 'POST':
    zebra_form = StripePaymentForm(request.POST)
    if zebra_form.is_valid():
    	my_profile = request.user.get_profile()
        stripe_customer = stripe.Customer.retrieve(my_profile.stripe_customer_id)
        stripe_customer.card = zebra_form.cleaned_data['stripe_token']
        stripe_customer.save()

        my_profile.last_4_digits = zebra_form.cleaned_data['last_4_digits']
        my_profile.stripe_customer_id = stripe_customer.id
        my_profile.save()

        # Do something kind for the user

else:
    zebra_form = StripePaymentForm()

Template Tags

There are a couple of template tags that take care of setting up the stripe env, and rendering a basic cc update form. Note that it's expected your StripePaymentForm is called either zebra_form or form.

To use in a template:

{% extends "base.html" %}{% load zebra_tags %}

{% block head %}{{block.super}}
	{% zebra_head_and_stripe_key %}
{% endblock %}

{% block content %}
	{% zebra_card_form %}
{% endblock %}

That's it - all the stripe tokeny goodness happens, and errors are displayed to your users.

Models and Mixins

Model and Mixin docs coming. For now, the code is pretty self-explanatory, and decently documented inline.

Other Useful Bits

Zebra comes with a manage.py command to clear out all the test customers from your account. To use it, run:

./manage.py clear_stripe_test_customers

It responds to --verbosity=[0-3].

Credits

I did not write any of stripe. It just makes me happy to use, and inspired to make better APIs for my users. For Stripe info, ask them: stripe.com

Code credits are in the AUTHORS file. Pull requests welcome!