- MAILCHIMP API 3.0 PHP
- Installation
- Instantiation
- OAuth
- Constructing a Request
- Handling A Response
- Callbacks
- Method Chart (*excluding verbs)
- Wiki - See for more in depth documentation
This is a PHP library for interacting with version 3.0 of MailChimp's API
This library assumes a basic understanding of the MailChimp application and its associated functions.
For Composer run:
composer require jhut89/mailchimp3php
Alternatively you may add a require line to your projects composer.json
for the package jhut89/mailchimp3php
.
Then run composer update
and add the composer autoloader to your project with:
require "vendor/autoload.php";
You can then use a use statement to pull in the Mailchimp class:
use MailchimpAPI\Mailchimp;
$mailchimp = new Mailchimp('123abc123abc123abc123abc-us0');
To instantiate you will need a new instance of the Mailchimp
class with your MailChimp account's API key as its only argument.
If you are using OAuth to obtain an access token, this library can handle the "handshake" for you.
You must first send the user to your applications authorize_uri
. You can get this url by calling the Mailchimp::getAuthUrl()
statically:
$client_id = '12345676543';
$redirect_url = 'https://www.some-domain.com/callback_file.php';
Mailchimp::getAuthUrl($client_id, $redirect_url);
Optionally, if you need to pass state information along with your request so that the callback response can be routed correctly, you can include a state parameter:
$client_id = '12345676543';
$redirect_url = 'https://www.some-domain.com/callback_file.php';
// state information encoded into a string to be included in the URL, for example data encoded in a JWT token
$state = 'eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJzdWIiOiIxMjM0NTY3ODkwIiwibmFtZSI6IkpvaG4gRG9lIiwiaWF0IjoxNTE2MjM5MDIyfQ.SflKxwRJSMeKKF2QT4fwpMeJf36POk6yJV_adQssw5c';
Mailchimp::getAuthUrl($client_id, $redirect_url, $state);
From there the user will input their username and password to approve your application and will be redirected to the redirect_uri
you set along with a code
.
With that code
you can now request an access token from mailchimp. For this you will need to call the Mailchimp::oauthExchange()
method statically like this:
$code = 'abc123abc123abc123abc123';
$client_id = '12345676543';
$client_secret = '789xyz789xyz789xyz789xyz';
$redirect_url = 'https://www.some-domain.com/callback_file.php';
Mailchimp::oauthExchange($code, $client_id, $client_secret, $redirect_url);
If the handshake is successful, then this method will return a string containing your API key like this: 123abc123abc123abc123abc123abc-us0
. This API key can now be used to instantiate your Mailchimp
class as we have above.
Once you have instantiated the Mailchimp
class you can start constructing requests. Constructing requests is done by 'chaining' methods to the $mailchimp
instance. In most cases this 'chain' will end with the HTTP verb for your request.
An Example of how to retrieve a list collection:
$mailchimp
->lists()
->get();
Retrieving an instance can be accomplished by giving a unique identifier for the instance you want as an argument to the appropriate method. For example if I wanted to retrieve a list instance from the above example I would simply pass a list_id
, as the only argument for the lists()
method. Like this:
$mailchimp
->lists('1a2b3c4d')
->get();
Methods available for each position in the chain depend on what the prior method returns. For example if I wanted to retrieve subscribers from a list in my account I would:
$mailchimp
->lists('1a2b3c4d')
->members()
->get();
Notice that I provided a list_id
to the lists()
method, as there would be no way to retrieve a list of subscribers from a lists collection. The above request however will only return 10 subscriber instances from the members collection. This is because MailChimp's API uses pagination (documented HERE) that defaults to count=10
and offset=0
. This library allows you to alter query string parameters by passing them as an argument to the GET()
method. We do this by providing an array of key-value pairs where the keys are the query parameter you wish to provide/alter and its value is the parameter's value. As an example if I wanted to retrieve the second 100 subscribers from my list I could:
$mailchimp
->lists('1a2b3c4d')
->members()
->get([
"count" => "100",
"offset" => "100"
]);
This would be equivalent to making a get request against:
Https://us0.api.mailchimp.com/3.0/lists/1a2b3c4d/members?count=100&offset=100
Going a little further we can retrieve a single list member by giving the members_hash
(md5 hash of lower-case address) to the members()
method. Like this:
$mailchimp
->lists('1a2b3c4d')
->members('8bdbf060209f35b52087992a3cbdf4d7')
->get();
Alternatively, in place of providing an md5 hash as the identifier to the members()
function you can provide a contact's email address as a string and this library will do the hashing for you. Like this:
$mailchimp
->lists('1a2b3c4d')
->members('[email protected]')
->get();
You can read about
GET
requests in depth here: https://github.com/Jhut89/Mailchimp-API-3.0-PHP/wiki/Get-Requests
While being able to retrieve data from your account is great we also need to be able to post new data. This can be done by calling the POST()
method at the end of a chain. As an example subscribing an address to a list would look like this:
$post_params = [
'email_address'=>'[email protected]',
'status'=>'subscribed'
];
$mailchimp
->lists('1a2b3c4d')
->members()
->post($post_params);
In this case I would not provide members()
with an identifier as I want to post to its collection. Also notice that the post data is an array of key-value pairs representing what parameters I want to pass to the MailChimp API. Be sure that you provide all required fields for the endpoint you are posting to. Check MailChimp's documentation for what parameters are required. Non-required parameters can just be added to the post data, and MailChimp will ignore any that are unusable. To illustrate here is an example of adding a subscriber to a list with some non-required parameters:
$merge_values = [
"FNAME" => "John",
"LNAME" => "Doe"
];
$post_params = [
"email_address" => "[email protected]",
"status" => "subscribed",
"email_type" => "html",
"merge_fields" => $merge_values
]
$mailchimp
->lists('1a2b3c4d')
->members()
->post($post_params);
You can read about
POST
requests in depth here: https://github.com/Jhut89/Mailchimp-API-3.0-PHP/wiki/Post-Requests
This library handles PUT and PATCH request similar to that of POST requests. Meaning that PUT()
& PATCH()
both accept an array of key-value pairs that represent the data you wish altered/provided to MailChimp. As an example if I was patching the subscriber that we subscribed above, to have a new first name, that would look like this.
$mailchimp
->lists('1a2b3c4d')
->members('a1167f5be2df7113beb69c95ebcdb2fd')
->patch([
"merge_fields" => ["FNAME" => "Jane"]
]);
You can read about
PATCH
&PUT
requests in depth here: https://github.com/Jhut89/Mailchimp-API-3.0-PHP/wiki/Patch-&-Put-Requests
Deleting a record from MailChimp is performed with the DELETE()
method and is constructed similar to GET requests. If I wanted to delete the above subscriber I would:
$mailchimp
->lists('1a2b3c4d')
->members('a1167f5be2df7113beb69c95ebcdb2fd')
->delete();
You can read about
DELETE
requests in depth here: https://github.com/Jhut89/Mailchimp-API-3.0-PHP/wiki/Delete-Requests
Methods named for http verbs such as get()
,post()
, patch()
, put()
, or delete()
kick off an over the wire request to MailChimp's A.P.I. Given a successful request these methods return an instance of a MailchimpResponse
.
I suggest you become familiar with this class as there are a number of modifiers and getters for different pieces of a response.
There are a number of getters we can use to interact with pieces our MailchimpResponse
instance. Some of the more commonly used ones are:
$response->deserialize(); // returns a deserialized (to php object) resource returned by API
$response->getHttpCode(); // returns an integer representation of the HTTP response code
$response->getHeaders(); // returns response headers as an array of key => value pairs
$response->getBody(); // return the raw text body of the response
As an example, if I posses an API key but want the contact email associated with its account:
$mailchimp = new Mailchimp('123abc123abc123abc123abc-us0');
$account = $mailchimp
->account()
->get()
$contact_email = $account
->deserialize()
->email
print $contact_email; // outputs something like "[email protected]"
You can read about how to work with responses in depth here: https://github.com/Jhut89/Mailchimp-API-3.0-PHP/wiki/Handling-A-Response
mailchimp()
|
|----account()
|
|----apps()
|
|----automations()
| |
| |----removedSubscribers()
| |----emails()
| |
| |---queue()*
| |---pauseAll()*
| |---startAll()*
|
|----batches()
|
|----batchWebhooks()
|
|----campaignFolders()
|
|----campaigns()
| |
| |----cancel()*
| |----pause()*
| |----replicate()*
| |----resume()*
| |----scedule()*
| |----send()*
| |----test()*
| |----unschedule()*
| |----checklist()
| |----feedback()
| |----content()
|
|----connectedSites()
| |
| |----verifyScriptInstallation()*
|
|----conversations()
| |
| |----messages()
|
|----ecommStores()
| |
| |----customers()
| |----products()
| | |
| | |----variants()
| | |----images()
| |
| |----promoRules()
| | |
| | |----promoCodes()
| |
| |----orders()
| | |
| | |----lines()
| |
| |----carts()
| |
| |----lines()
|
|----facebookAds()
|
|----fileManagerFiles()
|
|----fileManagerFolders()
|
|----googleAds()
|
|----landingPages()
| |
| |----publish()*
| |----unpublish()*
| |----content()
|
|----lists()
| |
| |----batchSubscribe()*
| |----webhooks()
| |----signupForms()
| |----mergeFields()
| |----growthHistory()
| |----clients()
| |----activity()
| |----abuseReports()
| |----segments()
| | |
| | |----batch()*
| | |----members()
| |
| |----members()
| | |
| | |---notes()
| | |---goals()
| | |---activity()
| | |---tags()
| |
| |----interestCategories()
| |
| |----interests()
|
|----ping()
|
|----reports()
| |
| |----unsubscribes()
| |----subReports()
| |----sentTo()
| |----locations()
| |----emailActivity()
| |----googleAnalytics()
| |----openDetails()
| |----eepurl()
| |----domainPerformance()
| |----advice()
| |----abuse()
| |----clickReports()
| |
| |----members()
|
|----searchCampaigns()
|
|----searchMembers()
|
|----templateFolders()
|
|----templates()
| |
| |----defaultContent()
|
|----verifiedDomains()
|
|----verify()
*Please see MailChimp's API Documentation for what verbs are appropriate where.
** Methods marked with a *
make a network request
**Please watch for updates, and feel free to Fork or Pull Request. Check out the Wiki for a little more info on contributing.