Integration Guide

Table Of Contents
Website Payments Standard Integration Guide September 2008 143
Recurring Payments – Subscribe Buttons
Creating Advanced Subscribe Buttons on the PayPal Website
3
z “Copying and Pasting the Subscribe Code” on page 152
z “Using the Button Creation Tool for an Unsubscribe Button” on page 154
N OTE: If JavaScript is disabled in your browser, PayPal provides an alternative tool described
in “Creating Advanced Subscribe Buttons With JavaScript Disabled” on page 155.
The Basic Steps for Using the Tool With Subscribe Buttons
The button creation tool for Subscribe buttons is a single webpage with three sections:
z Step 1 – Choose button type and enter payment details – This section lets you specify
the details of your Subscribe button. You can specify product options that subscribers can
choose, and you can offer trial periods at reduced rates.
z Step 2 – Track inventory (optional)This section lets you control whether to save your
button in your PayPal account. If you save your button, you can enter information that
PayPal uses to track inventory.
z Step 3 – Customize advanced features (optional) – This section lets you work with
advanced features of Subscribe buttons. If you are familiar with HTML programming and
the advanced HTML variables supported by Website Payments Standard buttons, you can
enter them here.
One section at a time is open for you to work with. To work with another section, click its step
bar to expand it.
You can switch between the sections as often as you like, until you click the Create Button
button at the bottom of the page. Then, PayPal generates the code for your button and displays
it on the You are viewing your button code page. Copy the code and paste it onto your
webpage, and your payment button is complete.
Saving Subscribe Buttons in Your PayPal Account
By default, the button creation tool saves payment buttons in your PayPal account. The tool
saves your button and generates the code when you click the Create Button. You must copy
and paste the generated code onto your webpages, whether or not you save your button at
PayPal. The generated code is shorter for saved buttons, because PayPal keeps most of the