@subscribe.dev/react
React hooks and provider for Subscribe.dev - Build AI-powered applications with integrated authentication, billing, storage, and 100+ curated AI models.
Subscribe.dev provides a secure, production-ready platform that leverages industry-standard services: Stripe handles all payment processing (ensuring zero exposure of payment data), Clerk provides authentication infrastructure, and our platform manages AI model access and usage tracking.
Installation
npm install @subscribe.dev/react
yarn add @subscribe.dev/react
bun add @subscribe.dev/react
Provider Usage
The SubscribeDevProvider
is a React context provider that wraps your application. It provides the necessary context for the useSubscribeDev
hook to function correctly.
To use it, simply wrap it at the root level around your React application:
import { SubscribeDevProvider } from '@subscribe.dev/react';
import React from 'react';
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom/client';
import App from './App';
import './index.css';
export default function Root() {
return (
<SubscribeDevProvider projectId={/*optional*/}>
<App />
</SubscribeDevProvider>
);
}
and call the useSubscribeDev
hook somewhere:
import {SubscribeDevProvider, useSubscribeDev} from '@subscribe.dev/react';
import {useState} from 'react';
export default function App() {
const {
isSignedIn,
signIn,
client,
user,
usage,
subscribe,
subscriptionStatus,
useStorage,
} = useSubscribeDev();
const [email, setEmail] = useState('');
}
Hook Return Values
When you call useSubscribeDev()
, you get the following values:
isSignedIn: boolean
- indicates whether the user is authenticated
signIn: () => void
- function to trigger the authentication flow
client: SubscribeDevClient
- instance with a run()
method for executing AI models
user: UserObject | null
- the current user object, or null
if not authenticated
usage: UsageInfo
- credits used and remaining for the user (updates automatically)
subscribe: () => void
- triggers the subscription flow in an iframe
subscriptionStatus: SubscriptionStatus
- indicates subscription tier and status
useStorage: <T>(key: string) => [T, (value: T) => void]
- hook for persisting user data across sessions
The hook provides the following types:
<TYPE_EXAMPLES>
export type RunParameters = {
input: {
width?: number;
height?: number
image?: string
} & ({
prompt?: string
} | {
messages: Array<{ role: string, content: string } | {
type: 'text' | 'image_url'
text?: string
image_url?: {
url: string
detail?: 'low' | 'high' | 'auto'
}
}>
}),
response_format: {
type: 'json_object'
} | {
type: 'json_schema'
json_schema: {
name: string
strict?: boolean
schema: Record<string, unknown>
}
} | ZodObject
}
type RunOutput = {
output: Array<string | Record<string, any>>
}
type UserObject = {
id: string
email: string
name: string | null
}
type SubscriptionStatus = {
hasActiveSubscription: boolean
plan?: {
id: string
name: string
price: number
}
status: 'active' | 'inactive' | 'cancelled' | 'expired' | 'none'
}
type UsageInfo = {
allocatedCredits: number
usedCredits: number
remainingCredits: number
}
</TYPE_EXAMPLES>
The client.run()
method signature:
run: async (model: string, input: RunParameters) => Promise<{ output: RunOutput }>
Usage Guidance
- Do not wrap your application in another Clerk provider, instead, using the one from SubscribeDev
- We should make sure that the user
isSignedIn
before using SubscribeDev functions-- if they aren't, call signIn
- Do not use the
useSubscribeDev
hook outside of the SubscribeDevProvider
context, as it will throw an error.
- You do not need to supply a projectId, but this will result in using a demo project, which is for development.
Client
Generally the client is mostly just used for its function run
which executes AI requests against your project and users' allocated credits.
The client has lower-level functions, but the React hooks mostly fill the role of calling these, and use the client under the hood. There is generally no need to use the client, but it exposed from the provider in cases of specialized use. The documentation for the client is available here.
Authentication
We embed a Clerk provider in the SubscribeDevProvider, utilizing the open-source Clerk authentication infrastructure. We have not rolled our own authentication system - instead, we wrap and extend Clerk's proven functionality to integrate seamlessly with Subscribe.dev services.
The authentication flow can sense its own token and embeds it as the Bearer ...
token for our client requests. Beyond triggering the sign-in flow, you do not need to implement anything special to authenticate users. Clerk handles all authentication security, session management, and user identity verification.
Security & Privacy FAQ
Q: Does Subscribe.dev ever see my users' credit card information?
A: No. All payment processing is handled directly by Stripe. Subscribe.dev never receives or stores payment data.
Q: Do you manage user passwords or authentication data?
A: No. All authentication is handled by Clerk's infrastructure. Subscribe.dev only receives authenticated user tokens.
Q: What happens if Stripe or Clerk services are down?
A: Payment and authentication flows would be temporarily unavailable, but your AI model usage would continue to work for already-authenticated users with existing credits.
Error Handling
All Subscribe.dev functions can throw errors, which you can catch using standard JavaScript error handling:
import { useSubscribeDev } from '@subscribe.dev/react';
function MyComponent() {
const { client } = useSubscribeDev();
const handleAIRequest = async () => {
try {
const result = await client.run('openai/gpt-4o', {
input: { prompt: "Hello, world!" }
});
console.log(result.output[0]);
} catch (error) {
if (error.type === 'insufficient_credits') {
console.error('Not enough credits:', error.message);
} else if (error.type === 'rate_limit_exceeded') {
console.error('Rate limited:', error.retryAfter);
} else {
console.error('AI request failed:', error.message);
}
}
};
return <button onClick={handleAIRequest}>Run AI Model</button>;
}
For detailed error types and handling strategies, refer to the error documentation.
Development & Debugging
Subscribe.dev is designed to work seamlessly with your existing development workflow:
- Console Logging: Use your normal browser dev tools to see logs, network requests, and debug information
- Network Tab: Monitor API calls to Subscribe.dev services in your browser's network inspector
- React DevTools: The provider and hooks work naturally with React DevTools for state inspection
- Error Boundaries: Wrap components using Subscribe.dev hooks in React Error Boundaries for graceful error handling
Observability & Platform Dashboard
For production applications, comprehensive observability is available through the Subscribe.dev platform dashboard:
- Visit platform.subscribe.dev to access detailed analytics
- Metrics & Usage: View generation counts, model usage patterns, and performance data
- Cost Analysis: Track spending across models and users with detailed breakdowns
- Real-time Monitoring: Monitor your application's AI usage in real-time
- Error Tracking: Investigate and debug issues with comprehensive error logs
The React client is designed for embedding in user-facing applications and only exposes public information and developer-friendly errors. For administrative access, team management, and detailed platform insights, use the web dashboard.
Credits and Usage
The usage object from the provider will update when you run requests through the SubscribeDevClient
. If we listen to the value from the provider hook, it should update automatically, but it may need to be present in e.g. the dependency array of a useEffect.
Subscribing / Managing Subscription
Calling subscribe()
is a magic function that will guide the user through a subscription flow powered by Stripe and allow them to manage their current subscription. All payment processing is handled securely by Stripe - Subscribe.dev has zero exposure to payment data, ensuring maximum security and compliance.
The subscription status will automatically update when changed, and we can trust the value from the provider.
User Object
We can use the user object to show the user's name, or profile badge, etc. On signing in, this will update to populated value, but may be empty before authentication.
Storage
The useStorage
hook should be called when we want to persist data at a component-level or application-level for users beyond their current session. This data is saved on the backend of subscribe.dev
and will persist across devices if the same authentication method is used.
Usage Example:
type AppState = {
lastState: string,
counter: number
};
export function ServerPersistedCounter(props) {
const [storedObject, setStoredObject] = useStorage<AppState>('app-state');
const updateCounter = () => {
setStoredObject({
...storedObject,
counter: (storedObject?.counter || 0) + 1
})
}
return (
<div>
<p>Counter: {storedObject?.counter || 0}</p>
<button onClick={updateCounter}>Click Me To Count</button>
</div>
);
}
Different Model Example Requests:
const result = await client.run('openai/gpt-4o', {
input: {
prompt: "Tell me a joke about AI"
}
});
console.log("Output Joke: ", result.output[0]);
const {output} = await client.run('openai/gpt-4o', {
input: {
prompt: "Tell me a joke about AI that has a property `setup` and `punchline`"
},
response_format: {
type: 'json_object'
}
});
console.log("Output Joke JSON: ", output[0]);
const {output: [jokeResponseJson]} = await client.run('openai/gpt-4o', {
input: {
prompt: "Tell me a joke about AI"
},
response_format: {
type: 'json_schema',
json_schema: {
name: 'Joke',
strict: true,
schema: {
type: 'object',
properties: {
setup: {type: 'string'},
punchline: {type: 'string'}
},
required: ['setup', 'punchline']
}
}
}
});
const jokeSchema = z.object({
setup: z.string(),
punchline: z.string()
});
const {output: [jokeResponseZodJson]} = await client.run('openai/gpt-4o', {
input: {
prompt: "Tell me a joke about AI"
},
response_format: jokeSchema
});
console.log("Output Joke JSON Schema: ", jokeResponseZodJson);
const {output: [multimodalResponse]} = await client.run('openai/gpt-4o', {
input: {
messages: [
{role: "system", content: "You identify stuff."},
{role: 'user', content: 'What is this image?'},
{type: 'image_url', image_url: {url: 'https://example.com/image.jpg'}}
]
}
});
console.log("Multimodal Response: ", multimodalResponse);
const {output: [cuteDog]} = await cli# @subscribe.dev/react
React hooks and provider for Subscribe.dev - Build AI-powered applications with integrated authentication, billing, storage, and 100+ curated AI models.
Subscribe.dev provides a secure, production-ready platform that leverages industry-standard services: **Stripe** handles all payment processing (ensuring zero exposure of payment data), **Clerk** provides authentication infrastructure, and our platform manages AI model access and usage tracking.
## Installation
```bash
npm install @subscribe.dev/react
# or
yarn add @subscribe.dev/react
# or
bun add @subscribe.dev/react
Provider Usage
The SubscribeDevProvider
is a React context provider that wraps your application. It provides the necessary context for the useSubscribeDev
hook to function correctly.
To use it, simply wrap it at the root level around your React application:
import { SubscribeDevProvider } from '@subscribe.dev/react';
import React from 'react';
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom/client';
import App from './App';
import './index.css';
export default function Root() {
return (
<SubscribeDevProvider projectId={/*optional*/}>
<App />
</SubscribeDevProvider>
);
}
and call the useSubscribeDev
hook somewhere:
import {SubscribeDevProvider, useSubscribeDev} from '@subscribe.dev/react';
import {useState} from 'react';
export default function App() {
const {
isSignedIn,
signIn,
client,
user,
usage,
subscribe,
subscriptionStatus,
useStorage,
} = useSubscribeDev();
const [email, setEmail] = useState('');
}
Hook Return Values
When you call useSubscribeDev()
, you get the following values:
isSignedIn: boolean
- indicates whether the user is authenticated
signIn: () => void
- function to trigger the authentication flow
client: SubscribeDevClient
- instance with a run()
method for executing AI models
user: UserObject | null
- the current user object, or null
if not authenticated
usage: UsageInfo
- credits used and remaining for the user (updates automatically)
subscribe: () => void
- triggers the subscription flow in an iframe
subscriptionStatus: SubscriptionStatus
- indicates subscription tier and status
useStorage: <T>(key: string) => [T, (value: T) => void]
- hook for persisting user data across sessions
The hook provides the following types:
<TYPE_EXAMPLES>
export type RunParameters = {
input: {
width?: number;
height?: number
image?: string
} & ({
prompt?: string
} | {
messages: Array<{ role: string, content: string } | {
type: 'text' | 'image_url'
text?: string
image_url?: {
url: string
detail?: 'low' | 'high' | 'auto'
}
}>
}),
response_format: {
type: 'json_object'
} | {
type: 'json_schema'
json_schema: {
name: string
strict?: boolean
schema: Record<string, unknown>
}
} | ZodObject
}
type RunOutput = {
output: Array<string | Record<string, any>>
}
type UserObject = {
id: string
email: string
name: string | null
}
type SubscriptionStatus = {
hasActiveSubscription: boolean
plan?: {
id: string
name: string
price: number
}
status: 'active' | 'inactive' | 'cancelled' | 'expired' | 'none'
}
type UsageInfo = {
allocatedCredits: number
usedCredits: number
remainingCredits: number
}
</TYPE_EXAMPLES>
The client.run()
method signature:
run: async (model: string, input: RunParameters) => Promise<{ output: RunOutput }>
Usage Guidance
- Do not wrap your application in another Clerk provider, instead, using the one from SubscribeDev
- We should make sure that the user
isSignedIn
before using SubscribeDev functions-- if they aren't, call signIn
- Do not use the
useSubscribeDev
hook outside of the SubscribeDevProvider
context, as it will throw an error.
- You do not need to supply a projectId, but this will result in using a demo project, which is for development.
Client
Generally the client is mostly just used for its function run
which executes AI requests against your project and users' allocated credits.
The client has lower-level functions, but the React hooks mostly fill the role of calling these, and use the client under the hood. There is generally no need to use the client, but it exposed from the provider in cases of specialized use. The documentation for the client is available here.
Authentication
We embed a Clerk provider in the SubscribeDevProvider, utilizing the open-source Clerk authentication infrastructure. We have not rolled our own authentication system - instead, we wrap and extend Clerk's proven functionality to integrate seamlessly with Subscribe.dev services.
The authentication flow can sense its own token and embeds it as the Bearer ...
token for our client requests. Beyond triggering the sign-in flow, you do not need to implement anything special to authenticate users. Clerk handles all authentication security, session management, and user identity verification.
Security & Privacy FAQ
Q: Does Subscribe.dev ever see my users' credit card information?
A: No. All payment processing is handled directly by Stripe. Subscribe.dev never receives or stores payment data.
Q: Do you manage user passwords or authentication data?
A: No. All authentication is handled by Clerk's infrastructure. Subscribe.dev only receives authenticated user tokens.
Q: What happens if Stripe or Clerk services are down?
A: Payment and authentication flows would be temporarily unavailable, but your AI model usage would continue to work for already-authenticated users with existing credits.
Error Handling
All Subscribe.dev functions can throw errors, which you can catch using standard JavaScript error handling:
import { useSubscribeDev } from '@subscribe.dev/react';
function MyComponent() {
const { client } = useSubscribeDev();
const handleAIRequest = async () => {
try {
const result = await client.run('openai/gpt-4o', {
input: { prompt: "Hello, world!" }
});
console.log(result.output[0]);
} catch (error) {
if (error.type === 'insufficient_credits') {
console.error('Not enough credits:', error.message);
} else if (error.type === 'rate_limit_exceeded') {
console.error('Rate limited:', error.retryAfter);
} else {
console.error('AI request failed:', error.message);
}
}
};
return <button onClick={handleAIRequest}>Run AI Model</button>;
}
For detailed error types and handling strategies, refer to the error documentation.
Development & Debugging
Subscribe.dev is designed to work seamlessly with your existing development workflow:
- Console Logging: Use your normal browser dev tools to see logs, network requests, and debug information
- Network Tab: Monitor API calls to Subscribe.dev services in your browser's network inspector
- React DevTools: The provider and hooks work naturally with React DevTools for state inspection
- Error Boundaries: Wrap components using Subscribe.dev hooks in React Error Boundaries for graceful error handling
Observability & Platform Dashboard
For production applications, comprehensive observability is available through the Subscribe.dev platform dashboard:
- Visit platform.subscribe.dev to access detailed analytics
- Metrics & Usage: View generation counts, model usage patterns, and performance data
- Cost Analysis: Track spending across models and users with detailed breakdowns
- Real-time Monitoring: Monitor your application's AI usage in real-time
- Error Tracking: Investigate and debug issues with comprehensive error logs
The React client is designed for embedding in user-facing applications and only exposes public information and developer-friendly errors. For administrative access, team management, and detailed platform insights, use the web dashboard.
Credits and Usage
The usage object from the provider will update when you run requests through the SubscribeDevClient
. If we listen to the value from the provider hook, it should update automatically, but it may need to be present in e.g. the dependency array of a useEffect.
Subscribing / Managing Subscription
Calling subscribe()
is a magic function that will guide the user through a subscription flow powered by Stripe and allow them to manage their current subscription. All payment processing is handled securely by Stripe - Subscribe.dev has zero exposure to payment data, ensuring maximum security and compliance.
The subscription status will automatically update when changed, and we can trust the value from the provider.
User Object
We can use the user object to show the user's name, or profile badge, etc. On signing in, this will update to populated value, but may be empty before authentication.
Storage
The useStorage
hook should be called when we want to persist data at a component-level or application-level for users beyond their current session. This data is saved on the backend of subscribe.dev
and will persist across devices if the same authentication method is used.
Usage Example:
type AppState = {
lastState: string,
counter: number
};
export function ServerPersistedCounter(props) {
const [storedObject, setStoredObject] = useStorage<AppState>('app-state');
const updateCounter = () => {
setStoredObject({
...storedObject,
counter: (storedObject?.counter || 0) + 1
})
}
return (
<div>
<p>Counter: {storedObject?.counter || 0}</p>
<button onClick={updateCounter}>Click Me To Count</button>
</div>
);
}
Different Model Example Requests:
const result = await client.run('openai/gpt-4o', {
input: {
prompt: "Tell me a joke about AI"
}
});
console.log("Output Joke: ", result.output[0]);
const {output} = await client.run('openai/gpt-4o', {
input: {
prompt: "Tell me a joke about AI that has a property `setup` and `punchline`"
},
response_format: {
type: 'json_object'
}
});
console.log("Output Joke JSON: ", output[0]);
const {output: [jokeResponseJson]} = await client.run('openai/gpt-4o', {
input: {
prompt: "Tell me a joke about AI"
},
response_format: {
type: 'json_schema',
json_schema: {
name: 'Joke',
strict: true,
schema: {
type: 'object',
properties: {
setup: {type: 'string'},
punchline: {type: 'string'}
},
required: ['setup', 'punchline']
}
}
}
});
const jokeSchema = z.object({
setup: z.string(),
punchline: z.string()
});
const {output: [jokeResponseZodJson]} = await client.run('openai/gpt-4o', {
input: {
prompt: "Tell me a joke about AI"
},
response_format: jokeSchema
});
console.log("Output Joke JSON Schema: ", jokeResponseZodJson);
const {output: [multimodalResponse]} = await client.run('openai/gpt-4o', {
input: {
messages: [
{role: "system", content: "You identify stuff."},
{role: 'user', content: 'What is this image?'},
{type: 'image_url', image_url: {url: 'https://example.com/image.jpg'}}
]
}
});
console.log("Multimodal Response: ", multimodalResponse);
const {output: [cuteDog]} = await client.run('black-forest-labs/flux-schnell', {
input: {
prompt: 'a cute dog',
width: 512,
height: 512
}
});
console.log("Generated Dog Image URL: ", cuteDog);
const {output: [dogTwin]} = await client.run('black-forest-labs/flux-schnell', {
input: {
prompt: 'another cute dog that looks like this dog',
image: "https://example.com/dog.jpg"
}
});
console.log("Generated Dog Twin Image URL: ", dogTwin);
```ent.run('black-forest-labs/flux-schnell', {
input: {
prompt: 'a cute dog',
width: 512,
height: 512
}
});
console.log("Generated Dog Image URL: ", cuteDog);
// generate an image with a reference image (only supported by some image-to-image models):
const {output: [dogTwin]} = await client.run('black-forest-labs/flux-schnell', {
input: {
prompt: 'another cute dog that looks like this dog',
image: "https://example.com/dog.jpg" // can be base64 encoded as well
}
});
console.log("Generated Dog Twin Image URL: ", dogTwin);