Integration Guide
Table Of Contents
- PayPal Payments Pro Integration Guide
- Contents
- Preface
- Introducing PayPal Payments Pro
- Introducing Direct Payment
- Introducing Express Checkout
- Getting Started With Direct Payment
- Getting Started With Express Checkout
- Integrating Recurring Payments
- How Recurring Payments Work
- Recurring Payments Terms
- Recurring Payments With Direct Payment
- Recurring Payments With the Express Checkout API
- Options for Creating a Recurring Payments Profile
- Recurring Payments Profile Status
- Getting Recurring Payments Profile Information
- Modifying a Recurring Payments Profile
- Billing the Outstanding Amount of a Profile
- Recurring Payments Notifications
- Getting Started With the PayPal Name-Value Pair API
- Implementing 3-D Secure Transactions (UK Only)
PayPal Payments Pro Integration Guide April 2012 81
Getting Started With the PayPal Name-Value Pair API
Creating an NVP Request
A
A method specifies the PayPal operation you want to execute, and each method is associated
with a version. Together, the method and version define the exact behavior of the API
operation. Typically, the behavior of an API operation does not change between versions;
however, you should carefully retest your code whenever you change a version.
To specify a method and version number:
1. Choose the PayPal API operation you want to use.
METHOD=
operation
2. Choose the appropriate version.
In most cases, you should use the latest version of the API operation.
VERSION=
version_number
Specifying an API Credential
You must specify API credentials in each request to execute a PayPal API operation.
When you execute a PayPal API operation, you use credentials, such as a signature, to
authenticate that you are requesting the API operation. The following diagram shows the API
credentials part of an NVP request:
IMPORTANT: You must protect the values for USER, PWD, and SIGNATURE in your
implementation. Consider storing these values in a secure location other than
your web server document root and setting the file permissions so that only
the system user that executes your ecommerce application can access it.