excid3 / receipts

Easy receipts and invoices for your Ruby on Rails applications
MIT License
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pdf pdf-receipt rails-application receipt ruby

Tests

Receipts Gem

Receipts, Invoices, and Statements for your Rails application that works with any payment provider. Receipts uses Prawn to generate the PDFs.

Check out the example PDFs.

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'receipts'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install receipts

Usage

To generate a Receipt, Invoice, or Statement, create an instance and provide content to render:

r = Receipts::Receipt.new(
  # title: "Receipt",
  details: [
    ["Receipt Number", "123"],
    ["Date paid", Date.today],
    ["Payment method", "ACH super long super long super long super long super long"]
  ],
  company: {
    name: "Example, LLC",
    address: "123 Fake Street\nNew York City, NY 10012",
    email: "support@example.com",
    logo: File.expand_path("./examples/images/logo.png")
  },
  recipient: [
    "Customer",
    "Their Address",
    "City, State Zipcode",
    nil,
    "customer@example.org"
  ],
  line_items: [
    ["<b>Item</b>", "<b>Unit Cost</b>", "<b>Quantity</b>", "<b>Amount</b>"],
    ["Subscription", "$19.00", "1", "$19.00"],
    [nil, nil, "Subtotal", "$19.00"],
    [nil, nil, "Tax", "$1.12"],
    [nil, nil, "Total", "$20.12"],
    [nil, nil, "<b>Amount paid</b>", "$20.12"],
    [nil, nil, "Refunded on #{Date.today}", "$5.00"]
  ],
  footer: "Thanks for your business. Please contact us if you have any questions."
)

# Returns a string of the raw PDF
r.render

# Writes the PDF to disk
r.render_file "examples/receipt.pdf"

Configuration

You can specify the default font for all PDFs by defining the following in an initializer:

Receipts.default_font = {
  bold: Rails.root.join('app/assets/fonts/tradegothic/TradeGothic-Bold.ttf'),
  normal: Rails.root.join('app/assets/fonts/tradegothic/TradeGothic.ttf'),
}

Options

You can pass the following options to generate a PDF:

Here's an example of where each option is displayed.

options

Line Items Table - Column Widths

You may set an option to configure the line items table's columns width in order to accommodate shortcomings of Prawn's width guessing ability to render header and content reasonably sized. The configuration depends on your line item column count and follows the prawn/table configuration as documented here:

This will size the second column to 400 and the fourth column to 50.

column_widths: {1 => 400,3 => 50 }

This will set all column widths, considering your table has 4 columns.

column_widths: [100, 200, 240]

If not set, it will fall back to Prawn's default behavior.

Formatting

details and line_items allow inline formatting with Prawn. This allows you to use HTML tags to format text: <b> <i> <u> <strikethrough> <sub> <sup> <font> <color> <link>

See the Prawn docs for more information.

Page Size

You can specify a different page size by passing in the page_size keyword argument:

receipt = Receipts::Receipt.new page_size: "A4"

Internationalization (I18n)

You can use I18n.t when rendering your receipts to internationalize them.

line_items: [
  [I18n.t("receipts.date"),           created_at.to_s],
  [I18n.t("receipts.product"), "GoRails"],
  [I18n.t("receipts.transaction"), uuid]
]

Custom PDF Content

You can change the entire PDF content by instantiating an Receipts object without any options.

receipt = Receipts::Receipt.new # creates an empty PDF

Each Receipts object inherits from Prawn::Document. This allows you to choose what is rendered and include any custom Prawn content you like.

receipt.text("hello world")

You can also use the Receipts helpers in your custom PDFs at the current cursor position.

receipt.text("Custom header")
receipt.render_line_items([
  ["my line items"]
])
receipt.render_footer("This is a custom footer using the Receipts helper")

Rendering PDFs

To render a PDF in memory, use render. This is recommended for serving PDFs in your Rails controllers.

receipt.render

To render a PDF to disk, use render_file:

receipt.render_file "receipt.pdf"

Rendering PDFs in Rails controller actions

Here's an example Rails controller action you can use for serving PDFs. We'll first look up the database record for the Charge we want to render a receipt for.

The Charge model has a receipt method that returns a Receipts::Receipt instance with all the receipt data filled out.

Then we can render to generate the PDF in memory. This produces a String with the raw PDF data in it.

Using send_data from Rails, we can send the PDF contents and provide the browser with a recommended filename, content type and disposition.

class ChargesController < ApplicationController
  before_action :authenticate_user!
  before_action :set_charge

  def show
    respond_to do |format|
      format.pdf { send_pdf }
    end
  end

  private

    def set_charge
      @charge = current_user.charges.find(params[:id])
    end

    def send_pdf
      # Render the PDF in memory and send as the response
      send_data @charge.receipt.render,
        filename: "#{@charge.created_at.strftime("%Y-%m-%d")}-gorails-receipt.pdf",
        type: "application/pdf",
        disposition: :inline # or :attachment to download
    end
end

Then, just link_to to your charge with the format of pdf. For example:

# config/routes.rb
resources :charges
<%= link_to "View Receipt", charge_path(@charge, format: :pdf) %>

Invoices

Invoices follow the exact same set of steps as above. You'll simply want to modify the details to include other information for the Invoice such as the Issue Date, Due Date, etc.

Receipts::Invoice.new(
  # title: "Invoice",
  details: [
    ["Invoice Number", "123"],
    ["Issue Date", Date.today.strftime("%B %d, %Y")],
    ["Due Date", Date.today.strftime("%B %d, %Y")],
    ["Status", "<b><color rgb='#5eba7d'>PAID</color></b>"]
  ],
  recipient: [
    "<b>Bill To</b>",
    "Customer",
    "Address",
    "City, State Zipcode",
    "customer@example.org"
  ],
  company: {
    name: "Example, LLC",
    address: "123 Fake Street\nNew York City, NY 10012",
    phone: "(555) 867-5309",
    email: "support@example.com",
    logo: File.expand_path("./examples/images/logo.png")
  },
  line_items: [
    ["<b>Item</b>", "<b>Unit Cost</b>", "<b>Quantity</b>", "<b>Amount</b>"],
    ["Subscription", "$19.00", "1", "$19.00"],
    [nil, nil, "Subtotal", "$19.00"],
    [nil, nil, "Tax Rate", "0%"],
    [nil, nil, "Amount Due", "$19.00"]
  ]
)

Statements

Statements follow the exact same set of steps as above. You'll simply want to modify the details to include other information for the Invoice such as the Issue Date, Start and End Dates, etc.

Receipts::Statement.new(
  # title: "Statement",
  details: [
    ["Statement Number", "123"],
    ["Issue Date", Date.today.strftime("%B %d, %Y")],
    ["Period", "#{(Date.today - 30).strftime("%B %d, %Y")} - #{Date.today.strftime("%B %d, %Y")}"]
  ],
  recipient: [
    "<b>Bill To</b>",
    "Customer",
    "Address",
    "City, State Zipcode",
    "customer@example.org"
  ],
  company: {
    name: "Example, LLC",
    address: "123 Fake Street\nNew York City, NY 10012",
    email: "support@example.com",
    phone: "(555) 867-5309",
    logo: File.expand_path("./examples/images/logo.png")
  },
  line_items: [
    ["<b>Item</b>", "<b>Unit Cost</b>", "<b>Quantity</b>", "<b>Amount</b>"],
    ["Subscription", "$19.00", "1", "$19.00"],
    [nil, nil, "Subtotal", "$19.00"],
    [nil, nil, "Tax Rate", "0%"],
    [nil, nil, "Total", "$19.00"]
  ]
)

Contributing

  1. Fork it https://github.com/excid3/receipts/fork
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create a new Pull Request