apac (Amazon Product Advertising Client) will allow you to access the Amazon Product Advertising API from Node.js. It supports the newly required Request Signatures which can be a bit tedious to generate on your own. Learn more about the Amazon Product Advertising API.
node-apac is just a thin wrapper around Amazon's API. The only intent is to take care of request signatures, performing the HTTP requests, processing the responses and parsing the XML. You should be able to run any operation becuase the operation and all parameters are passed directly to the execute method just as they will be passed to Amazon. The result is that you feel likely you're working directly with the API, but you don't have to worry about some of the more teadious tasks.
Wesley Yue has joined us as the main project maintainer. For quite some time now I have not had the time to maintain this project properly, so I hope with Wesley your Pull Requests and issues will be addressed more quickly. Thanks Wesley! I hope to still stay involved, but wanted to remove myself as bottleneck.
Wesley is a CS student from Vancouver. He has spent most of his time in Python/Django/Flask and PHP and is getting his feet wet with Node.js. He's anxious to learn and improve this project.
Install using npm:
$ npm install apac@latest
If you try to install without "@latest", it will try to install the most recent stable version, but there is no stable version yet. So for now you must specify latest.
Here's a quick example:
var util = require('util'),
OperationHelper = require('apac').OperationHelper;
var opHelper = new OperationHelper({
awsId: '[YOUR AWS ID HERE]',
awsSecret: '[YOUR AWS SECRET HERE]',
assocId: '[YOUR ASSOCIATE TAG HERE]'
});
opHelper.execute('ItemSearch', {
'SearchIndex': 'Books',
'Keywords': 'harry potter',
'ResponseGroup': 'ItemAttributes,Offers'
}, function(results) {
console.log(results);
});
// output:
// { ItemSearchResponse:
// { '$': { xmlns: 'http://webservices.amazon.com/AWSECommerceService/2011-08-01' },
// OperationRequest: [ [Object] ],
// Items: [ [Object] ] } }
Results are returned as a JSON object (XML results parsed using xml2js -- thanks pierrel).
Because we don't define any specific operations, we also don't document them. What a waste when you can find them all here: API Reference
Copyright (c) 2010 Dustin McQuay. All rights reserved.
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