How to Override Price Selection Strategy
In this document, you’ll learn how to override Medusa’s price selection strategy to create a custom pricing strategy.
If you’re interested in learning what a price selection strategy is and how it works, check out this documentation instead.
1. Create Class
Create a TypeScript or JavaScript file in src/strategies
of your Medusa server project with a class that extends the AbstractPriceSelectionStrategy
class:
import {
AbstractPriceSelectionStrategy,
IPriceSelectionStrategy,
PriceSelectionContext,
PriceSelectionResult,
} from "@medusajs/medusa"
import { EntityManager } from "typeorm"
export default class MyStrategy extends AbstractPriceSelectionStrategy {
withTransaction(manager: EntityManager): IPriceSelectionStrategy {
if (!manager) {
return this
}
return new MyStrategy()
}
async calculateVariantPrice(
variant_id: string,
context: PriceSelectionContext
): Promise<PriceSelectionResult> {
// TODO
}
}
You can use services or repositories in the strategy by adding them to the constructor and updating the parameters passed to the MyStrategy
constructor in withTransaction
. For example:
import {
AbstractPriceSelectionStrategy,
CustomerService,
IPriceSelectionStrategy,
PriceSelectionContext,
PriceSelectionResult,
} from "@medusajs/medusa"
export default class MyStrategy extends AbstractPriceSelectionStrategy {
private customerService: CustomerService
constructor({
customerService,
}) {
super()
this.customerService = customerService
}
withTransaction(manager: EntityManager): IPriceSelectionStrategy {
if (!manager) {
return this
}
return new MyStrategy({
customerService: this.customerService,
})
}
// ...
}
2. Implement calculateVariantPrice
Implement the price selection strategy you want inside the calculateVariantPrice
method.
This method accepts the variant ID as a first parameter and the context object as a second parameter.
This method must return an object having the following fields:
{
originalPrice, // number | null
calculatedPrice, // number | null
prices // MoneyAmount[]
}
You can learn more about optional properties and the meaning behind every property here.
3. Run Build Command
In your terminal, run the build command to transpile the files in the src
directory into the dist
directory:
- npm
- Yarn
npm run build
yarn run build
Test it Out
Run your server to test it out:
- npm
- Yarn
npm run start
yarn run start
Then, try out your strategy using any of the Products or Carts endpoints which include retrieving product variants and line items respectively. You should then see the prices in the response based on your implemented strategy.