ASIN is a simple, extensible wrapper for parts of the REST-API of Amazon Product Advertising API (aka Associates Web Service aka Amazon E-Commerce Service).
For more information on the REST calls, have a look at the whole Amazon E-Commerce-API.
Have a look at the RDOC for this project, if you like browsing some docs.
The gem runs smoothly with Rails 3 and is tested against multiple rubies. See .travis.yml
for details.
gem install asin gem install httpclient # optional, see HTTPI gem install rash # optional, see Response Configuration
or in your Gemfile:
gem 'asin' gem 'httpclient' # optional, see HTTPI gem 'rash' # optional, see Response Configuration
Rails style initializer (config/initializers/asin.rb):
ASIN::Configuration.configure do |config| config.secret = 'your-secret' config.key = 'your-key' end
YAML style configuration:
ASIN::Configuration.configure :yaml => 'config/asin.yml'
Inline style configuration:
ASIN::Configuration.configure :secret => 'your-secret', :key => 'your-key' # or client.configure :secret => 'your-secret', :key => 'your-key'
Have a look at ASIN::Configuration class for all the details.
With the latest version of the Product Advertising API you need to include your associate_tag.
ASIN::Configuration.configure do |config| config.secret = 'your-secret' config.key = 'your-key' config.associate_tag = 'your-tag' end
ASIN is designed as a module, so you can include it into any object you like:
# require and include require 'asin' include ASIN::Client # lookup an ASIN lookup '1430218150'
But you can also use the instance
method to get a proxy-object:
# just require require 'asin' # create an ASIN client client = ASIN::Client.instance # lookup an item with the amazon standard identification number (asin) items = client.lookup '1430218150' # have a look at the title of the item items.first.title => Learn Objective-C on the Mac (Learn Series) # search for any kind of stuff on amazon with keywords items = search_keywords 'Learn', 'Objective-C' items.first.title => "Learn Objective-C on the Mac (Learn Series)" # search for any kind of stuff on amazon with custom parameters search :Keywords => 'Learn Objective-C', :SearchIndex => :Books items.first.title => "Learn Objective-C on the Mac (Learn Series)" # access the internal data representation (Hashie::Mash) item.raw.ItemAttributes.ListPrice.FormattedPrice => $39.99
There is an additional set of methods to support AWS cart operations:
client = ASIN::Client.instance # create a cart with an item cart = client.create_cart({:asin => '1430218150', :quantity => 1}) cart.items => [<#Hashie::Mash ASIN="1430218150" CartItemId="U3G241HVLLB8N6" ... >] # get an already existing cart from a CartId and HMAC cart = client.get_cart('176-9182855-2326919', 'KgeVCA0YJTbuN/7Ibakrk/KnHWA=') cart.empty? => false # clear everything from the cart cart = client.clear_cart(cart) cart.empty? => true # add items to the cart cart = client.add_items(cart, {:asin => '1430216263', :quantity => 2}) cart.empty? => false # update items in the cart cart = client.update_items(cart, {:cart_item_id => cart.items.first.CartItemId, :action => :SaveForLater}, {:cart_item_id => cart.items.first.CartItemId, :quantity => 7}) cart.saved_items => [<#Hashie::Mash ASIN="1430218150" CartItemId="U3G241HVLLB8N6" ... >]
It’s also possible to access browse nodes:
client = ASIN::Client.instance # create a cart with an item node = client.browse_node('163357', :ResponseGroup => :TopSellers) node.node_id => '163357' node.name => 'Comedy'
ASIN is customizable in the way it returns Responses from Amazon. By default it will return SimpleItem
, SimpleCart
or SimpleNode
instances, but you can override this behavior for using your custom Classes:
client.configure :item_type => YourItemClass client.configure :cart_type => YourCartClass client.configure :node_type => YourNodeClass
You can also use built-in :raw
, :mash
or :rash
types. Since rash
is an additional library, you need to add it to your gemfile if you want to use it:
gem 'rash'
ASIN uses HTTPI as a HTTP-Client adapter. See the HTTPI documentation for how to configure different clients or the logger. As a default HTTPI uses httpclient so you should add that dependency to your project:
gem 'httpclient'
“THE BEER-WARE LICENSE” (Revision 42): [email protected] wrote this file. As long as you retain this notice you can do whatever you want with this stuff. If we meet some day, and you think this stuff is worth it, you can buy me a beer in return Peter Schröder