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 and is tested against multiple rubies. See .travis.yml for details.
Version 2 removes all the SimpleXXX classes in favor of Hashie::Rash.
The old API is available if you require ASIN::Adapter
:
require 'asin'
require 'asin/adapter'
It's also a good starting point for looking into writing your own asin-adapter.
gem install asin
or in your Gemfile:
gem 'asin'
Rails style initializer (config/initializers/asin.rb
):
ASIN::Configuration.configure do |config|
config.secret = 'your-secret'
config.key = 'your-key'
config.associate_tag = 'your-tag'
end
Have a look at ASIN::Configuration
class for all the details.
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'
# lookup multiple items by ASIN
lookup ['1430218150','1934356549']
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.item_attributes.title
# => Learn Objective-C on the Mac (Learn Series)
# search for any kind of stuff on amazon with keywords
items = client.search_keywords 'Learn', 'Objective-C'
items.first.item_attributes.title
# => "Learn Objective-C on the Mac (Learn Series)"
# search for any kind of stuff on amazon with custom parameters
items = client.search :Keywords => 'Learn Objective-C', :SearchIndex => :Books
items.first.item_attributes.title
# => "Learn Objective-C on the Mac (Learn Series)"
# search for similar items like the one you already have
items = client.similar '1430218150'
items.first.item_attributes.title
# => "Beginning iOS 7 Development: Exploring the iOS SDK"
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.cart_items.cart_item
# => [<#Hashie::Rash ASIN="1430218150" CartItemId="U3G241HVLLB8N6" ... >]
# clear everything from the cart
cart = client.clear_cart(cart)
cart.cart_items.cart_item
# => []
# 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_for_later_items.saved_for_later_item
# => [<#Hashie::Rash 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('17', :ResponseGroup => :TopSellers)
node.first.browse_node_id
# => '163357'
node.first.name
# => 'Literature & Fiction'
ASIN uses Confiture as a Configuration gem. See the Confiture documentation for different configuration styles.
"THE (extended) BEER-WARE LICENSE" (Revision 42.0815): phoet contributed to this project.
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 some beers in return.