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Kotlin #

dwolla-v2-kotlin is an actively maintained client library for Java/Kotlin applications and is used to facilitate interactions with the Dwolla API. The source code is available on our GitHub page.

Getting Started #

Installation #

To begin using this SDK, you will first need to download it to your machine. You can use Maven or Gradle to do so, depending on which build tool your project is using.

Maven

Add this to your project's POM:

xml
<repositories>
    <repository>
        <id>jitpack.io</id>
        <url>https://jitpack.io</url>
    </repository>
</repositories>

Gradle

Add this to your project's build file:

groovy
repositories {
    // ...
    maven(url = "https://jitpack.io") {
        name = "jitpack"
    }
}

Initialization #

Before any API requests can be made, you must first determine which environment you will be using, as well as fetch the application key and secret. To fetch your application key and secret, please visit one of the following links:

Finally, you can create an instance of Dwolla with key and secret replaced with the application key and secret that you fetched from one of the aforementioned links, respectively.

Kotlin

kotlin
import com.dwolla.Dwolla
import com.dwolla.DwollaEnvironment

val dwolla = Dwolla(
    key = "YOUR_APP_KEY",
    secret = "YOUR_APP_SECRET",
    environment = DwollaEnvironment.SANDBOX // defaults to PRODUCTION
)

Java

java
import com.dwolla.Dwolla;
import com.dwolla.DwollaEnvironment;

Dwolla dwolla = new Dwolla(
    "YOUR_APP_KEY",
    "YOUR_APP_SECRET",
    DwollaEnvironment.SANDBOX // defaults to PRODUCTION
);

Making Requests #

The Dwolla client provides high-level and low-level methods for interacting with the Dwolla API.

High-Level Requests #

The best SDKs are not just simple; they’re intuitive. Developers would rather stay in the flow of their code than troubleshoot back-and-forth trying to figure out someone else’s code. Luckily, statically typed languages let us include information typically found in docs within type signatures.

Taking Our SDKs Higher

While the low-level methods are all you need, high-level methods exist to make things easier. They embed information you would typically refer to the docs for in the SDK itself such as endpoints, request parameters, and response parameters.

As of now, a subset of the Dwolla API has high-level methods available:

Low-Level Requests #

To make low-level HTTP requests, you can use the get(), post(), and delete() methods.

  • dwolla.get
  • dwolla.post
  • dwolla.delete

Examples:

Handling errors #

Dwolla V2 Kotlin has 3 types of exceptions:

DwollaException
├── DwollaApiException
└── DwollaAuthException
  • DwollaApiException: Thrown when the Dwolla API returns an error response. This could occur for a variety of reasons such as invalid request parameters.
  • DwollaAuthException: Thrown when an error occurs obtaining authenticating with the API. You should not encounter this exception unless your Dwolla key/secret are incorrect.
  • DwollaException: The base class other exceptions inherit from.
Kotlin
kotlin
try {
    dwolla.customers.list()
} catch (e: DwollaApiException) {
    e.message // String
    e.statusCode // Int
    e.headers // Headers
    e.error // DwollaError
} catch (e: DwollaAuthException) {
    e.message // String
    e.statusCode // Int
    e.headers // Headers
    e.error // OAuthError
} catch (e: DwollaException) {
    e.message // String
    e.cause // Throwable?
}
Java
java
try {
    dwolla.customers.list();
} catch (DwollaApiException e) {
    String message = e.message;
    Integer statusCode = e.statusCode;
    Headers headers = e.headers;
    DwollaError error = e.error;
} catch (DwollaAuthException e) {
    String message = e.message;
    Integer statusCode = e.statusCode;
    Headers headers = e.headers;
    OAuthError error = e.error;
} catch (DwollaAuthException e) {
    String message = e.message;
    Throwable cause = e.cause;
}

Community #

Docker #

If you prefer to use Docker to run dwolla-v2-kotlin locally, a Dockerfile file is included in the root directory. You can either build the Docker image with your API key and secret (by passing the values via CLI), or you can specify the values for the app_key and app_secret build arguments in Dockerfile. Finally, you will need to build and run the Docker image. More information on this topic can be found on Docker's website, or you can find some example commands below.

Building Docker Container
shell
# Building container by specifying build arguments.
# In this configuration, you will not need to modify Dockerfile. All of the
# necessary arguments are passed via Docker's `--build-arg` option.
$ docker build \
    --build-arg app_key=YOUR_API_KEY \
    --build-arg app_secret=YOUR_APP_SECRET \
    -t dwolla/kotlin:latest .

# Building container without specifying build arguments.
# In this configuration, you will need to specify your account API key and
# secret (retrieved from Dwolla) in the Dockerfile file.
$ docker build -t dwolla/kotlin:latest .
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