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Dennis O'Keeffe
Dennis O'Keeffe

Posted on • Originally published at blog.dennisokeeffe.com

Your first Stripe Charge with Ruby on Rails in 5 minutes

In this short series, we are going to look at how to create a charge to Stripe in a number of their officially supported languages!

Today, we are going to look at how to do so with Ruby on Rails.

The expectations are that you have both Rails installed and have your Stripe API keys setup and ready to go.

The following comes in part from my documentation website.

Getting Started

Assuming you have Rails installed, run the following:

rails new ruby-rails-stripe
cd ruby-rails-stripe
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Add the following to the top of your Gemfile for us to read local .env file values and bundle Stripe.

gem 'dotenv-rails', groups: [:development, :test]
gem 'stripe'
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On the console, run bundle.

Setting up your environment variables

For your Stripe account, add in your PK and SK test values.

PK_TEST_KEY=
SK_TEST_KEY=
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Scaffolding the Charges Route

From the console run:

rails generate controller Charges create
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This will scaffold our app/controllers/charges_controller.rb controller.

Inside that, let's update the code:

require 'stripe'

class ChargesController < ApplicationController
  # POST /charge
  # POST /charge.json
  def create
    # `source` is obtained with Stripe.js; see https://stripe.com/docs/payments/accept-a-payment-charges#web-create-token
    charge = Stripe::Charge.create({
      amount: params[:amount],
      currency: 'aud',
      source: 'tok_amex',
      receipt_email: params[:receipt_email],
      description: 'My First Test Charge (created for API docs)',
    })
    render json: charge
  end
end
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This code will make a charge to Stripe using the JSON body params amount and receipt_email.

If the charge is successful, it will return the charge information as JSON.

Updating config/routes.rb

Ensure routes has the following for POST:

Rails.application.routes.draw do
  # ... the rest is omitted for brevity
  post 'charges/create'
  # For details on the DSL available within this file, see http://guides.rubyonrails.org/routing.html
end
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This ensures that we can send a POST request to http://localhost:PORT/charges/create when we run the server.

Running the code

Run rails server to get our server up and running (defaulting to 3000).

In this example using HTTPie, call http POST http://localhost:3000/charges/create amount:=1700 receipt_email=hello_rails@example.com and we will get back our charge results sent as JSON. Hooray!

I chose to use HTTPie because I feel it is a fun tool that more should know about! Alternative, you could do the above using curl as well (or anything that can make a POST request for a matter of fact).

curl --header "Content-Type: application/json" \
  --request POST \
  --data '{"amount":1700,"receipt_email":"hello_rails@example.com"}' \
  http://localhost:3000/charges/create
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If you now go and check your Stripe dashboard, you will be able to see a charge

Stripe Dashboard

Resources and further reading

  1. Using Rails for API only
  2. Stripe Ruby Github
  3. Dotenv Ruby Github
  4. Scaffolding routes
  5. HTTP Requests in Rails Apps
  6. Action Controlller Overview
  7. HTTPie

Image credit: Alexandru Acea

Originally posted on my blog. Follow me on Twitter for more hidden gems @dennisokeeffe92.

Top comments (1)

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Yaroslav Shmarov

Good article, however this approach is legacy for a while now: stripe.com/docs/payments/checkout/...