1page.title=Administering In-app Billing 2parent.title=In-app Billing 3parent.link=index.html 4@jd:body 5 6<div id="qv-wrapper"> 7<div id="qv"> 8 <h2>In this document</h2> 9 <ol> 10 <li><a href="#billing-list-setup">Creating a Product List</a></li> 11 <li><a href="#billing-purchase-type">Choosing a Product Type</a></li> 12 <li><a href="#billing-testing-setup">Setting up Test Accounts</a></li> 13 <li><a href="#billing-refunds">Handling Refunds</a></li> 14 <li><a href="#billing-refunds">Working with Order Numbers</a></li> 15 <li><a href="#billing-support">Where to Get Support</a></li> 16 </ol> 17 18 </ol> 19 <h2>See also</h2> 20 <ol> 21 <li><a href="{@docRoot}google/play/billing/billing_overview.html">Overview of In-app 22 Billing</a></li> 23 </ol> 24</div> 25</div> 26 27<p>In-app billing frees you from processing financial transactions, but you still need to perform a 28few administrative tasks, including setting up and maintaining your product list on the Google Play 29Developer Console, registering test accounts, and handling refunds when necessary.</p> 30 31<p>You must have a Google Play publisher account to register test accounts. And you must have a 32Google Wallet merchant account to create a product list and issue refunds to your users. If you 33already have a publisher account on Google Play, you can use your existing account. You do not 34need to register for a new account to support in-app billing.</p> 35 36<p>If you do not have a publisher account, you can register as a Google Play 37developer and set up a publisher account at the <a 38href="http://play.google.com/apps/publish">Google Play Developer Console</a>. If you do not 39have a Google Wallet merchant account, you can register for one through the 40Developer Console.</p> 41 42<h2 id="billing-list-setup">Creating a Product List</h2> 43 44<p>The Google Play Developer Console provides a product list for each of your published 45applications. You can sell an item using Google Play's in-app billing feature only if the item is 46listed on an application's product list. Each application has its own product list; you cannot sell 47items that are listed in another application's product list.</p> 48 49<p>You can access an application's product list by clicking the <strong>In-App Products</strong> 50link in applications listed in your developer account (see 51figure 1). The <strong>In-App Products</strong> link appears only if you have a Google Wallet 52merchant account and the application's manifest includes the <code>com.android.vending.BILLING</code> 53permission.</p> 54 55<p>A product list specifies items you are selling in an application — in-app products, 56subscriptions, or a combination of both. For each item, the product list contains information such as a product id, 57product description, and price. The product list stores only metadata about the items 58you are selling in your application. It does not store any digital content. You are responsible for 59storing and delivering the digital content that you sell in your applications.</p> 60 61<div style="margin:1em;"> 62<img style="border:1px solid #ddd;padding-bottom:.5em" src="{@docRoot}images/in-app-billing/billing_product_list.png" xheight="548" id="figure1" /> 63<p class="img-caption" style="padding-left:.5em;"> 64 <strong>Figure 1.</strong> You can access an application's product list by clicking the 65 <strong>In-App Products</strong> link in the main Apps navigation. 66</p> 67</div> 68 69<p>You can create a product list for any published application, or any 70application in the alpha or beta channels, that's been 71uploaded and saved to the Developer Console. However, you must have a Google Wallet merchant 72account and the application's manifest must include the <code>com.android.vending.BILLING</code> 73permission. If an application's manifest does not include this permission, you will be able to edit 74existing items in the product list but you will not be able to add new items to the list. For more 75information about this permission, see 76<a href="{@docRoot}google/play/billing/billing_integrate.html#billing-permission">Updating Your 77Application's Manifest</a>.</p> 78 79<p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> Previously you could test an app by 80uploading an unpublished "draft" version. This functionality is no longer 81supported; instead, you must publish it to the alpha or beta distribution 82channel. For more information, see <a 83href="{@docRoot}google/play/billing/billing_testing.html#draft_apps">Draft Apps 84are No Longer Supported</a>. 85 86<p>In addition, an application package can have only one product list. If you create a product 87list for an application, and you use the <a 88href="{@docRoot}google/play/publishing/multiple-apks.html">multiple APK feature</a> to distribute 89more than one APK for that application, the product list applies to all APK versions that are 90associated with the application listing. You cannot create individual product lists for each APK if 91you are using the multiple APK feature.</p> 92 93<p>You can add items to a product list two ways: you can add items one at a time by using the In-app 94Products UI (see figure 2), or you can add a batch of items by importing the items from a 95comma-separated values (CSV) file. Adding items one at a time is useful if your 96application has only a few in-app items or you are adding only a few items to a 97product list for testing purposes. The CSV file method is useful if your application has a large 98number of in-app items.</p> 99 100<p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> Batch upload of product lists containing subscriptions is not yet supported.</p> 101 102<h3 id="billing-form-add">Adding items one at a time to a product list</h3> 103 104<p>To add an item to a product list using the In-app Products UI, follow these steps:</p> 105 106<ol> 107 <li><a href="http://play.google.com/apps/publish">Log in</a> to your publisher account.</li> 108 <li>In the <strong>All Applications</strong> panel, click on the 109 app name, then select <strong>In-app Products</strong>.</li> 110 <li>Click <strong>Add new product</strong> (see figure 2) and provide details about the item you are 111 selling and then click <strong>Save</strong> or <strong>Publish</strong>.</li> 112</ol> 113 114<div style="margin:1em;"> 115<img style="border:1px solid #ddd;padding-bottom:.5em;" src="{@docRoot}images/in-app-billing/billing_add.png" height="300" id="figure2" /> 116<p class="img-caption" style="padding-left:.5em;"> 117 <strong>Figure 2.</strong> The Add New Product page lets you add items to an 118 application's product list. 119</p> 120</div> 121 122<p>You must enter the following information for each item in a product list:</p> 123<ul> 124 <li><strong>In-app Product ID</strong> 125 <p>Product IDs are unique across an application's namespace. A product ID must start with a 126 lowercase letter or a number, and must be composed using only lowercase letters (a-z), numbers 127 (0-9), underlines (_), and dots (.). The product ID "android.test" is reserved, as are all 128 product IDs that start with "android.test."</p> 129 <p>In addition, you cannot modify an item's product ID after it is created, and you cannot reuse 130 a product ID.</p> 131 </li> 132 <li><strong>Product Type</strong> 133 <p>The product type can be <strong>Managed per user account</strong>, <strong>Unmanaged</strong>, 134 or <strong>Subscription</strong>. You can never change an item's product type after you set it. For more 135 information, see <a href="#billing-purchase-type">Choosing a product type</a> later in this 136 document.</p> 137 </li> 138 <li><strong>Publishing State</strong> 139 <p>An item's publishing state can be <strong>Published</strong> or <strong>Unpublished 140 </strong>. To be visible to a user during checkout, an item's publishing state must be set to 141 <strong>Published</strong> and the item's application must be published on Google Play.</p> 142 <p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> This is not true for test accounts. An item is visible to 143 a test account if the application is not published and the item is published. See <a 144 href="{@docRoot}google/play/billing/billing_testing.html#billing-testing-real">Testing In-app 145 Billing</a> for more information.</p> 146 </li> 147 <li><strong>Languages and Translations</strong> 148 <p>You can provide localized titles and descriptions for your in-app 149 products using the Add Translations button. If you want Google Play to translate 150 your title and description for you, based on the title and description in the 151 default language, just click the languages that you want to offer. If you want 152 to provide custom translations in specific languages, you can also do that. By 153 default, an in-app product inherits its default language from the parent 154 application.</p> 155 </li> 156 <li><strong>Title</strong> 157 <p>The title is a short descriptor for the item. For example, "Sleeping potion." Titles must be 158 unique across an application's namespace. Every item must have a title. The title is visible to 159 users during checkout. For optimum appearance, titles should be no longer than 25 characters; 160 however, titles can be up to 55 characters in length.</p> 161 </li> 162 <li><strong>Description</strong> 163 <p>The description is a long descriptor for the item. For example, "Instantly puts creatures to 164 sleep. Does not work on angry elves." Every item must have a description. Descriptions can be up to 80 characters in length.</p> 165 </li> 166 <li><strong>Price</strong> 167 <p>You must provide a default price in your home currency. You can also provide prices in other 168 currencies, but you can do this only if a currency's corresponding country is listed as a 169 target country for your application. You can specify target countries on the Edit Application 170 page in the Google Play developer console.</p> 171 <p>To specify prices in other currencies, you can manually enter the price for each 172 currency or you can click <strong>Auto Fill</strong> and let Google Play do a one-time 173 conversion from your home currency to the currencies you are targeting (see figure 3).</p> 174 <p>For subscription items, note that you can not change the item's price once you have published it. </p> 175 </li> 176</ul> 177 178<div style="margin:1em;"> 179<img style="border:1px solid #ddd;padding-bottom:.5em" src="{@docRoot}images/in-app-billing/billing_list_form_2.png" xheight="1226" id="figure3" /> 180<p class="img-caption" style="padding-left:.5em;"> 181 <strong>Figure 3.</strong> Specifying additional currencies for an in-app product. 182</p> 183</div> 184 185<p>For more information about product IDs and product lists, see <a 186href="http://support.google.com/googleplay/android-developer/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=1072599">Creating In-App Product 187IDs</a>. For more information about pricing, see <a 188href="http://support.google.com/googleplay/android-developer/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=1153485">In-App Billing 189Pricing</a>.</p> 190 191<p class="note"><strong>Note</strong>: Be sure to plan your product ID namespace. You cannot reuse 192or modify product IDs after you save them.</p> 193 194<h3 id="billing-bulk-add">Adding a batch of items to a product list</h3> 195 196<p>To add a batch of items to a product list using a CSV file, you first need to create your CSV 197file. The data values that you specify in the CSV file represent the same data values you specify 198manually through the In-app Products UI (see <a href="#billing-form-add">Adding items one at a time 199to a product list</a>). 200 201<p>If you are importing and exporting CSV files with in-app products, please 202keep tax-inclusive pricing in mind. If you use auto-fill, you can provide a 203tax-exclusive default price and tax-inclusive prices will be auto-filled. If you 204do not use auto-fill, prices you provide must include tax.</p> 205 206<p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> Batch upload of product lists containing subscriptions is not yet supported.</p> 207 208The CSV file uses commas (,) and semi-colons (;) to separate data values. 209Commas are used to separate primary data values, and semi-colons are used to separate subvalues. For 210example, the syntax for the CSV file is as follows:</p> 211 212<p>"<em>product_id</em>","<em>publish_state</em>","<em>purchase_type</em>","<em>autotranslate</em> 213","<em>locale</em>; <em>title</em>; <em>description</em>","<em>autofill</em>","<em>country</em>; 214<em>price</em>" 215</p> 216 217<p>Descriptions and usage details are provided below.</p> 218 219<ul> 220 <li><em>product_id</em> 221 <p>This is equivalent to the In-app Product ID setting in the In-app Products UI. If you specify 222 a <em>product_id</em> that already exists in a product list, and you choose to overwrite 223 the product list while importing the CSV file, the data for the existing item is overwritten with 224 the values specified in the CSV file. The overwrite feature does not delete items that are on a 225 product list but not present in the CSV file.</p> 226 </li> 227 <li><em>publish_state</em> 228 <p>This is equivalent to the Publishing State setting in the In-app Products UI. Can be <code> 229 published</code> or <code>unpublished</code>.</p> 230 </li> 231 <li><em>purchase_type</em> 232 <p>This is equivalent to the Product Type setting in the In-app Products UI. Can be <code> 233 managed_by_android</code>, which is equivalent to <strong>Managed per user account 234 </strong> in the In-app Products UI, or <code>managed_by_publisher</code>, which is equivalent 235 to <strong>Unmanaged</strong> in the In-app Products UI.</p> 236 </li> 237 <li><em>autotranslate</em> 238 <p>This is equivalent to selecting the <strong>Fill fields with auto translation</strong> 239 checkbox in the In-app Products UI. Can be <code>true</code> or <code>false</code>.</p> 240 </li> 241 <li><em>locale</em> 242 <p>This is equivalent to the Language setting in the In-app Products UI. You must have an entry 243 for the default locale. The default locale must be the first entry in the list of 244 locales, and it must include a <em>title</em> and <em>description</em>. If you want to provide 245 translated versions of the <em>title</em> and <em>description</em> in addition to the default, 246 you must use the following syntax rules:</p> 247 <p>If <em>autotranslate</em> is <code>true</code>, you must specify the default locale, 248 default title, default description, and other locales using the following format:</p> 249 <p>"true,"<em>default_locale</em>; <em>default_locale_title</em>; 250 <em>default_locale_description</em>; <em>locale_2</em>; <em>locale_3</em>, ..."</p> 251 <p>If <em>autotranslate</em> is <code>false</code>, you must specify the default locale, 252 default title, and default description as well as the translated titles and descriptions using 253 the following format:</p> 254 <p>"false,"<em>default_locale</em>; <em>default_locale_title</em>; 255 <em>default_locale_description</em>; <em>locale_2</em>; <em>locale_2_title</em>; 256 <em>local_2_description</em>; <em>locale_3</em>; <em>locale_3_title</em>; 257 <em>locale_3_description</em>; ..."</p> 258 <p>See table 1 for a list of the language codes you can use with the <em>locale</em> field.</p> 259 </li> 260 <li><em>title</em> 261 <p>This is equivalent to the Title setting in the In-app Products UI. If the <em>title</em> 262 contains a semicolon, it must be escaped with a backslash (for example, "\;"). A backslash 263 should also be escaped with a backslash (for example, "\\">.</p> 264 </li> 265 <li><em>description</em> 266 <p>This is equivalent to the Description in the In-app Products UI. If the <em>description</em> 267 contains a semicolon, it must be escaped with a backslash (for example, "\;"). A backslash 268 should also be escaped with a backslash (for example, "\\">.</p> 269 </li> 270 <li><em>autofill</em> 271 <p>This is equivalent to clicking <strong>Auto Fill</strong> in the In-app Products UI. Can be 272 <code>true</code> or <code>false</code>. The syntax for specifying the <em>country</em> 273 and <em>price</em> varies depending on which <em>autofill</em> setting you use.</p> 274 <p>If <em>autofill</em> is set to <code>true</code>, you need to specify only the default 275 price in your home currency and you must use this syntax:</p> 276 <p>"true","<em>default_price_in_home_currency</em>" 277 <p>If <em>autofill</em> is set to <code>false</code>, you need to specify a <em>country</em> 278 and a <em>price</em> for each currency and you must use the following syntax:</p> 279 <p>"false", "<em>home_country</em>; <em>default_price_in_home_currency</em>; <em>country_2</em>; 280 <em>country_2_price</em>; <em>country_3</em>; <em>country_3_price</em>; ..."</p> 281 </li> 282 <li><em>country</em> 283 <p>The country for which you are specifying a price. You can only list countries that your 284 application is targeting. The country codes are two-letter uppercase 285 ISO country codes (such as "US") as defined by 286 <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_3166-1_alpha-2">ISO 3166-2</a>.</p> 287 </li> 288 <li><em>price</em> 289 <p>This is equivalent to the Price in the In-app Products UI. The price must be specified in 290 micro-units. To convert a currency value to micro-units, you multiply the real value by 1,000,000. 291 For example, if you want to sell an in-app item for $1.99 you specify 1990000 in the 292 <em>price</em> field.</p> 293 </li> 294</ul> 295 296<p class="table-caption" id="language-table"><strong>Table 1.</strong> Language codes you can use 297with the <em>locale</em> field.</p> 298 299<table> 300 301<tr> 302<th>Language</th> 303<th>Code</th> 304<th>Language</th> 305<th>Code</th> 306</tr> 307<tr> 308<td>Chinese</td> 309<td>zh_TW</td> 310<td>Italian</td> 311<td>it_IT</td> 312</tr> 313<tr> 314<td>Czech</td> 315<td>cs_CZ</td> 316<td>Japanese</td> 317<td>ja_JP</td> 318</tr> 319<tr> 320<td>Danish</td> 321<td>da_DK</td> 322<td>Korean</td> 323<td>ko_KR</td> 324</tr> 325<tr> 326<td>Dutch</td> 327<td>nl_NL</td> 328<td>Norwegian</td> 329<td>no_NO</td> 330</tr> 331<tr> 332<td>English</td> 333<td>en_US</td> 334<td>Polish</td> 335<td>pl_PL</td> 336</tr> 337<tr> 338<td>French</td> 339<td>fr_FR</td> 340<td>Portuguese</td> 341<td>pt_PT</td> 342</tr> 343<tr> 344<td>Finnish</td> 345<td>fi_FI</td> 346<td>Russian</td> 347<td>ru_RU</td> 348</tr> 349<tr> 350<td>German</td> 351<td>de_DE</td> 352<td>Spanish</td> 353<td>es_ES</td> 354</tr> 355<tr> 356<td>Hebrew</td> 357<td>iw_IL</td> 358<td>Swedish</td> 359<td>sv_SE</td> 360</tr> 361<tr> 362<td>Hindi</td> 363<td>hi_IN</td> 364<td>--</td> 365<td>--</td> 366</tr> 367</table> 368 369<p>To import the items that are specified in your CSV file, do the following:</p> 370 371<ol> 372 <li><a href="http://play.google.com/apps/publish">Log in</a> to your publisher account.</li> 373 <li>In the <strong>All Applications</strong> panel, click on the app 374 name, then select <strong>In-app Products</strong>.</li> 375 <li>On the In-app Products List page, click <strong>Import/Export</strong> 376 > <strong>Import in-app products from CSV file</strong>, then select your 377 CSV file. 378 <p>The CSV file must be on your local computer or on a local disk that is connected to your 379 computer.</p> 380 </li> 381 <li>Select the <strong>Overwrite</strong> checkbox if you want to overwrite existing items in 382 your product list. 383 <p>This option overwrites values of existing items only if the value of the <em>product_id</em> 384 in the CSV file matches the In-app Product ID for an existing item in the product list. 385 Overwriting does not delete items that are on a product list but not present in the CSV 386 file.</p> 387 </li> 388</ol> 389 390<p>You can also export an existing product list to a CSV file by clicking <strong>Export to CSV 391</strong> on the In-app Product List page. This is useful if you have manually added items to 392a product list and you want to start managing the product list through a CSV file.</p> 393 394<h3 id="billing-purchase-type">Choosing a Product Type</h3> 395 396<p>An item's product type controls how Google Play manages the purchase of the item. There are 397several product types, including "managed per user account", "unmanaged," and "subscription." However, 398note that the product types supported vary 399across In-app Billing Version, so you should always choose a product type that's valid for the 400version of In-app BIlling that your app uses. </p> 401 402<p>For details, refer to the documentation for <a 403href="{@docRoot}google/play/billing/api.html#producttype">In-app Billing Version 4043</a> or <a href="{@docRoot}google/play/billing/v2/api.html#producttype">In-app 405Billing Version 2</a>. 406 407<h2 id="billing-refunds">Handling Refunds</h2> 408 409<p>In-app billing does not allow users to send a refund request to Google Play. Refunds for 410in-app purchases must be directed to you (the application developer). You can then process the 411refund through your Google Wallet merchant account. When you do this, Google Play receives a 412refund notification from Google Wallet, and Google Play sends a refund message to your 413application. For more information, see <a 414href="{@docRoot}google/play/billing/v2/api.html#billing-action-notify">Handling 415IN_APP_NOTIFY messages</a> and <a 416href="http://support.google.com/googleplay/android-developer/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=1153485">In-app Billing 417Pricing</a>.</p> 418 419<p class="caution"><strong>Important:</strong> You cannot use the Google Wallet API to issue 420refunds or cancel In-app Billing transactions. You must do this manually through your Google 421Wallet merchant account. However, you can use the Google Wallet API to retrieve order 422information.</p> 423 424<h2 id="orderId">Working with Order Numbers</h2> 425 426<p>When a user purchases an in-app item, Google Wallet assigns the transaction 427a unique and permanent order number. Google Play provides that order number to 428you at the conclusion of the purchase flow, as the value of the 429<code>orderId</code> field of the <code>PURCHASE_STATE_CHANGED</code> 430intent.</p> 431 432<p>In your app, you can use the order number as a general-purpose identifier for 433the in-app purchase transaction. After the purchase, you can use the order 434number as a means of tracking the transaction in reconciliation reports and for 435customer support.</p> 436 437<p>The order number itself is a string consisting of numbers only, with a format 438assigned and managed by Google Wallet.</p> 439 440<p>For transactions dated 5 December 2012 or later, Google Wallet assigns a 441Merchant Order Number (rather than a Google Order Number) and reports the Merchant 442Order Number as the value of <code>orderID</code>. Here's an 443example:</p> 444 445<pre>"orderId" : "12999556515565155651.5565135565155651"</pre> 446 447<p>For transactions dated previous to 5 December 2012, Google checkout assigned 448a Google Order Number and reported that number as the value of 449<code>orderID</code>. Here's an example of an <code>orderID</code> holding a 450Google Order Number:</p> 451 452<pre>"orderId" : "556515565155651"</pre> 453 454<h2 id="billing-testing-setup">Setting Up Test Accounts</h2> 455 456<p>The Google Play Developer Console lets you set up one or more test accounts. A test account is a 457regular Google account that you register on the Developer Console as a test account. Test accounts are 458authorized to make in-app purchases from applications that you have uploaded to the Google Play 459Developer Console but have not yet published.</p> 460 461<p>You can use any Google account as a test account. Test accounts are useful if you want to let 462multiple people test In-app Billing on applications without giving them access to your publisher 463account's sign-in credentials. If you want to own and control the test accounts, you can create the 464accounts yourself and distribute the credentials to your developers or testers.</p> 465 466<p>Test accounts have three limitations:</p> 467 468<ul> 469 <li>Test account users can make purchase requests only within applications that are already 470 uploaded to your publisher account (although the application doesn't need to be published).</li> 471 <li>Test accounts can only be used to purchase items that are listed (and published) in an 472 application's product list.</li> 473 <li>Test account users do not have access to your publisher account and cannot upload applications 474 to your publisher account.</li> 475</ul> 476 477<p>To add test accounts to your publisher account, follow these steps:</p> 478 479<ol> 480 <li><a href="http://play.google.com/apps/publish">Log in</a> to your publisher account.</li> 481 <li>Click the <strong>Settings</strong> icon.</li> 482 <li>Locate the License Testing panel.</li> 483 <li>Add the email addresses for the test accounts you want to register, 484 separating each account with a comma.</li> 485 <li>Click <strong>Save</strong> to save your profile changes.</li> 486</ol> 487 488<h3 id="license_key">Getting an app's license key</h3> 489 490<p>The Google Play Developer Console provides a public licensing key for each 491app. To get the key for an app, follow these steps:</p> 492<ol> 493 <li>Open the <strong>All Applications</strong> panel.</li> 494 <li>Click on the app name, then select <strong>Services & APIs</strong>.</li> 495 <li>Scroll down to the <strong>Your License Key for this Application</strong> 496field to locate the key for the app, as shown in the figure below.</li> 497</ol> 498<p>Previously, the Developer Console provided a single public key per developer 499account. To transition apps to the new per-app public key, the Developer Console 500set the app-specific key as the former developer key. This ensures compatibility 501for apps that depend on the (former) developer key. </p> 502 503<div style="margin:1em;"> 504<img style="border:1px solid #ddd;padding-bottom:.5em" src="{@docRoot}images/in-app-billing/billing_app_key.png" xheight="510" id="figure4" /> 505<p class="img-caption" style="padding-left:.5em;"> 506 <strong>Figure 4.</strong> You can find the license key for each app in the 507 <strong>Services & APIs</strong> panel. 508</p> 509</div> 510 511<h2 id="billing-support">Where to Get Support</h2> 512 513<p>If you have questions or encounter problems while implementing In-app Billing, contact the 514support resources listed in the following table (see table 2). By directing your queries to the 515correct forum, you can get the support you need more quickly.</p> 516 517<p class="table-caption" id="support-table"><strong>Table 2.</strong> Developer support resources 518for Google Play In-app Billing.</p> 519 520<table> 521 522<tr> 523<th>Support Type</th> 524<th>Resource</th> 525<th>Range of Topics</th> 526</tr> 527<tr> 528<td rowspan="2">Development and testing issues</td> 529<td>Google Groups: <a 530href="http://groups.google.com/group/android-developers">android-developers</a> </td> 531<td rowspan="2">In-app billing integration questions, user experience ideas, handling of responses, 532obfuscating code, IPC, test environment setup.</td> 533</tr> 534<tr> 535<td>Stack Overflow: <a 536href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/android">http://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/ 537android</a></td> 538</tr> 539<tr> 540<td>Billing issue tracker</td> 541<td><a href="http://code.google.com/p/marketbilling/issues/">Billing 542project issue tracker</a></td> 543<td>Bug and issue reports related specifically to In-app Billing sample code.</td> 544</tr> 545</table> 546 547<p>For general information about how to post to the groups listed above, see <a 548href="{@docRoot}resources/community-groups.html">Developer Forums</a> document in the Resources 549tab.</p> 550 551 552 553