The Stripe Python library provides convenient access to the Stripe API from applications written in the Python language. It includes a pre-defined set of classes for API resources that initialize themselves dynamically from API responses which makes it compatible with a wide range of versions of the Stripe API.
See the Python API docs.
You don't need this source code unless you want to modify the package. If you just want to use the package, just run:
pip install --upgrade stripe
Install from source with:
python setup.py install
- Python 2.7+ or Python 3.4+ (PyPy supported)
The library needs to be configured with your account's secret key which is
available in your Stripe Dashboard. Set stripe.api_key
to its
value:
import stripe
stripe.api_key = "sk_test_..."
# list charges
stripe.Charge.list()
# retrieve single charge
stripe.Charge.retrieve("ch_1A2PUG2eZvKYlo2C4Rej1B9d")
For apps that need to use multiple keys during the lifetime of a process, like one that uses Stripe Connect, it's also possible to set a per-request key and/or account:
import stripe
# list charges
stripe.Charge.list(
api_key="sk_test_...",
stripe_account="acct_..."
)
# retrieve single charge
stripe.Charge.retrieve(
"ch_1A2PUG2eZvKYlo2C4Rej1B9d",
api_key="sk_test_...",
stripe_account="acct_..."
)
The library can be configured to use urlfetch
, requests
, pycurl
, or
urllib2
with stripe.default_http_client
:
client = stripe.http_client.UrlFetchClient()
client = stripe.http_client.RequestsClient()
client = stripe.http_client.PycurlClient()
client = stripe.http_client.Urllib2Client()
stripe.default_http_client = client
Without a configured client, by default the library will attempt to load
libraries in the order above (i.e. urlfetch
is preferred with urllib2
used
as a last resort). We usually recommend that people use requests
.
A proxy can be configured with stripe.proxy
:
stripe.proxy = "https://user:[email protected]:1234"
The library can be configured to emit logging that will give you better insight
into what it's doing. The info
logging level is usually most appropriate for
production use, but debug
is also available for more verbosity.
There are a few options for enabling it:
-
Set the environment variable
STRIPE_LOG
to the valuedebug
orinfo
$ export STRIPE_LOG=debug
-
Set
stripe.log
:import stripe stripe.log = 'debug'
-
Enable it through Python's logging module:
import logging logging.basicConfig() logging.getLogger('stripe').setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
If you're writing a plugin that uses the library, we'd appreciate it if you
identified using stripe.set_app_info()
:
stripe.set_app_info("MyAwesomePlugin", version="1.2.34", url="https://myawesomeplugin.info")
This information is passed along when the library makes calls to the Stripe API.
The test suite depends on stripe-mock, so make sure to fetch and run it from a background terminal (stripe-mock's README also contains instructions for installing via Homebrew and other methods):
go get -u github.com/stripe/stripe-mock
stripe-mock
Install pipenv, then install all dependencies for the project:
pipenv install --dev
Run all tests on all supported Python versions:
make test
Run all tests for a specific Python version (modify -e
according to your Python target):
pipenv run tox -e py27
Run all tests in a single file:
pipenv run tox -e py27 -- tests/api_resources/abstract/test_updateable_api_resource.py
Run a single test suite:
pipenv run tox -e py27 -- tests/api_resources/abstract/test_updateable_api_resource.py::TestUpdateableAPIResource
Run a single test:
pipenv run tox -e py27 -- tests/api_resources/abstract/test_updateable_api_resource.py::TestUpdateableAPIResource::test_save
Run the linter with:
make lint