Credit Card Type provides a useful utility method for determining a credit card type from both fully qualified and partial numbers. This is not a validation library but rather a smaller component to help you build your own validation or UI library.
This library is designed for type-as-you-go detection (supports partial numbers) and is written in CommonJS so you can use it in Node, io.js, and the browser.
To install via npm:
npm install credit-card-type
To install via Bower:
bower install credit-card-type
var creditCardType = require('credit-card-type');
var visaCards = creditCardType('4111');
console.log(visaCards[0].type); // 'visa'
var ambiguousCards = creditCardType('6');
console.log(ambiguousCards.length); // 3
console.log(ambiguousCards[0].niceType); // 'Discover'
console.log(ambiguousCards[1].niceType); // 'UnionPay'
console.log(ambiguousCards[2].niceType); // 'Maestro'
creditCardType
will return an array of objects, each with the following data:
Key | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
niceType |
String |
A pretty printed representation of the card brand. - Visa - MasterCard - American Express - Diners Club - Discover - JCB - UnionPay - Maestro |
type |
String |
A code-friendly presentation of the card brand (useful to class names in CSS). Please refer to Card Type "Constants" below for the list of possible values. - visa - master-card - american-express - diners-club - discover - jcb - unionpay - maestro |
pattern |
RegExp |
The regular expression used to determine the card type. |
gaps |
Array |
The expected indeces of gaps in a string representation of the card number. For example, in a Visa card, 4111 1111 1111 1111 , there are expected spaces in the 4th, 8th, and 12th positions. This is useful in setting your own formatting rules. |
lengths |
Array |
The expected lengths of the card number as an array of strings (excluding spaces and / characters). |
code |
Object |
The information regarding the security code for the determined card. Learn more about the code object below. |
If no card types are found, this returns an empty array.
getTypeInfo
will return a singular object (with the same structure as creditCardType
) corresponding with the specified type
, or undefined if the specified type
is invalid/unknown.
Named variables are provided for each of the supported card types:
VISA
MASTERCARD
AMERICAN_EXPRESS
DINERS_CLUB
DISCOVER
JCB
UNIONPAY
MAESTRO
Card brands provide different nomenclature for their security codes as well as varying lengths.
Brand | Name | Size |
---|---|---|
Visa |
CVV |
3 |
MasterCard |
CVC |
3 |
American Express |
CID |
4 |
Diners Club |
CVV |
3 |
Discover |
CID |
3 |
JCB |
CVV |
3 |
UnionPay |
CVN |
3 |
Maestro |
CVC |
3 |
A full response for a Visa
card will look like this:
{
niceType: 'Visa',
type: 'visa',
pattern: '^4[0-9][\\s\\d]*$',
gaps: [ 4, 8, 12 ],
lengths: [16],
code: { name: 'CVV', size: 3 }
}
CommonJS:
var creditCardType = require('credit-card-type');
var getTypeInfo = require('credit-card-type').getTypeInfo;
var CardType = require('credit-card-type').types;
ES6:
import creditCardType, { getTypeInfo, types as CardType } from 'credit-card-type')
creditCardType(cardNumber).filter(function(card) {
return card.type == CardType.MASTERCARD || card.type == CardType.VISA;
})
function prettyCardNumber(cardNumber, cardType) {
var card = getTypeInfo(cardType);
if (card) {
var offsets = [0].concat(card.gaps).concat([cardNumber.length]);
var components = [];
for (var i = 0; offsets[i] < cardNumber.length; i++) {
var start = offsets[i];
var end = Math.min(offsets[i + 1], cardNumber.length);
components.push(cardNumber.substring(start, end));
}
return components.join(' ');
}
return cardNumber;
}
prettyCardNumber('xxxxxxxxxx343', CardType.AMERICAN_EXPRESS); // 'xxxx xxxxxx 343'
We use nvm
for managing our node versions, but you do not have to. Replace any nvm
references with the tool of your choice below.
nvm install
npm install
All testing dependencies will be installed upon npm install
and the test suite executed with npm test
.