@ciptex/esign-sdk
The esign-api helper library lets you write Node.js code to make HTTP requests to the Ciptex Race Esign API.
> Do not use Basic Authentication in a front-end application. Doing so can expose your Twilio credentials to end-users as part of the bundled HTML/JavaScript sent to their browser.
The easiest way to install esign-sdk is from NPM. You can run the command below from your project directory to install the library:
``bash`
npm install --save @ciptex/esign-sdk@latest
Then in your code:
`typescript`
import { EsignClient } from "@ciptex/esign-sdk"
Try Listing Configuration like this:
`typescript
import { EsignClient } from "@ciptex/esign-sdk"
const accountSid = "ACXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX"; // Your Account SID from www.twilio.com/console
const authToken = "your_auth_token"; // Your Auth Token from www.twilio.com/console
const client = new EsignClient({ accountSid, authToken });
const main = async () => {
try {
// LIST EXAMPLE HERE
}
catch (error) {
console.error(error);
}
}
main()
`
> It's okay to hardcode your credentials when testing locally, but you should use environment variables to keep them secret before committing any code or deploying to production. Check out How to Set Environment Variables for more information.
`typescript`
const accountSid = "ACXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX";
const authToken = "your_auth_token";
const client = new EsignClient({ accountSid, authToken });
`typescript
import { EsignClient } from "@ciptex/esign-sdk"
const accountSid = "ACXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX";
const authToken = "your_auth_token";
const client = new EsignClient({ accountSid, authToken });
const main = async () => {
try {
//CREATE EXAMPLE HERE
}
catch (error) {
console.error(error);
}
}
main()
`
`typescript
import { EsignClient } from "@ciptex/esign-sdk"
const accountSid = "ACXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX";
const authToken = "your_auth_token";
const client = new EsignClient({ accountSid, authToken });
const main = async () => {
try {
//GET EXAMPLE HERE
}
catch (error) {
console.error(error);
}
}
main()
``
If the Esign API returns a 400 or a 500 level HTTP response, the esign-sdk library will throw an error which can be caught. 400-level errors are normal during API operation ("Invalid number", "Cannot deliver SMS to that number", for example) and should be handled appropriately.