Awesome
react-amplitude
A React component library for easy product analytics instrumentation.
Project Status
react-amplitude is not an officially supported Amplitude SDK or library, and deprecated now.
Please use our offical Typescript SDK to track with React!
The problems with traditional, imperative event-based logging
- Contextual event information (i.e. "event properties") often require lots of plumbing to the code path where the events are logged, requiring more code and breaking encapsulation.
- Similarly, it can be difficult to provide contextual information to events fired in low-level, reusable components (e.g. Buttons, Dropdowns, Links, etc.).
- Traditional event-based analytics logging often use imperative APIs, which can sometimes require more code and be more painful when writing declarative React components.
The problems with "autotrack" solutions
- Autotrack solutions can be unreliable, as they may depend on attributes that engineers may unintentionally change (like CSS selectors).
- Autotrack solutions may unintentionally track sensitive user data.
- Autotrack can't capture all kinds of events, so you may end up requiring to implement manual event logging.
The solution
react-amplitude has a modern, declarative API to make it easy to instrument new events and properties with Amplitude. It takes advantage of core React features to propagate contextual information down through the component hierarchy. This makes it far less painful to add new event properties to existing events.
Unlike "autotrack" solutions, react-amplitude does require some code changes in order to start sending data to Amplitude. However, it aims to minimize the amount of code required to start collecting data and make instrumentation seem less like a chore.
If you use common reusable components in your React application like Buttons, Dropdowns, Links, etc., you should be able to achieve "autotrack"-like instrumentation with just a few lines of code. And from there, it can be really simple to instrument new properties and context throughout your application, giving you the same flexibility as manual event logging.
Example: Instrumenting Tic-Tac-Toe (From Facebook's Intro to React Tutorial)
Events logged:
- start game
- game won
- click square
- jump to move
- go to game start
Event properties:
- scope (array; "square", "history", "game")
- moves made (number)
- winner ("X" or "O")
- current player ("X" or "O")
import React from "react";
import { render } from "react-dom";
import amplitude from "amplitude-js";
import {
AmplitudeProvider,
Amplitude,
LogOnMount
} from "@amplitude/react-amplitude";
const AMPLITUDE_KEY = "";
function Square(props) {
return (
<Amplitude
eventProperties={inheritedProps => ({
...inheritedProps,
scope: [...inheritedProps.scope, "square"]
})}
>
{({ instrument }) => (
<button
className="square"
onClick={instrument("click square", props.onClick)}
>
{props.value}
</button>
)}
</Amplitude>
);
}
class Board extends React.Component {
renderSquare(i) {
return (
<Square
value={this.props.squares[i]}
onClick={() => this.props.onClick(i)}
/>
);
}
render() {
return (
<div>
<div className="board-row">
{this.renderSquare(0)}
{this.renderSquare(1)}
{this.renderSquare(2)}
</div>
<div className="board-row">
{this.renderSquare(3)}
{this.renderSquare(4)}
{this.renderSquare(5)}
</div>
<div className="board-row">
{this.renderSquare(6)}
{this.renderSquare(7)}
{this.renderSquare(8)}
</div>
</div>
);
}
}
class Game extends React.Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.state = {
history: [
{
squares: Array(9).fill(null)
}
],
stepNumber: 0,
xIsNext: true
};
}
handleClick(i) {
const history = this.state.history.slice(0, this.state.stepNumber + 1);
const current = history[history.length - 1];
const squares = current.squares.slice();
if (calculateWinner(squares) || squares[i]) {
return;
}
squares[i] = this.state.xIsNext ? "X" : "O";
this.setState({
history: history.concat([
{
squares: squares
}
]),
stepNumber: history.length,
xIsNext: !this.state.xIsNext
});
}
jumpTo(step) {
this.setState({
stepNumber: step,
xIsNext: step % 2 === 0
});
}
render() {
const history = this.state.history;
const current = history[this.state.stepNumber];
const winner = calculateWinner(current.squares);
const moves = history.map((step, move) => {
const desc = move ? "Go to move #" + move : "Go to game start";
return (
<li key={move}>
<Amplitude
eventProperties={inheritedProps => ({
...inheritedProps,
scope: [...inheritedProps.scope, "move button"]
})}
>
{({ logEvent }) => (
<button
onClick={() => {
logEvent(move ? "jump to move" : "go to game start");
this.jumpTo(move);
}}
>
{desc}
</button>
)}
</Amplitude>
</li>
);
});
let status;
if (winner) {
status = "Winner: " + winner;
} else {
status = "Current player: " + (this.state.xIsNext ? "X" : "O");
}
return (
<AmplitudeProvider
amplitudeInstance={amplitude.getInstance()}
apiKey={AMPLITUDE_KEY}
>
<Amplitude
eventProperties={{
scope: ["game"],
"moves made": this.state.step,
"current player": this.state.xIsNext ? "X" : "O",
winner
}}
>
<LogOnMount eventType="start game" />
{!!winner && <LogOnMount eventType="game won" />}
<div className="game">
<div className="game-board">
<Board
squares={current.squares}
onClick={i => this.handleClick(i)}
/>
</div>
<Amplitude
eventProperties={inheritedProps => ({
...inheritedProps,
scope: [...inheritedProps.scope, "history"]
})}
>
<div className="game-info">
<div>{status}</div>
<ol>{moves}</ol>
</div>
</Amplitude>
</div>
</Amplitude>
</AmplitudeProvider>
);
}
}
// ========================================
render(<Game />, document.getElementById("root"));
function calculateWinner(squares) {
const lines = [
[0, 1, 2],
[3, 4, 5],
[6, 7, 8],
[0, 3, 6],
[1, 4, 7],
[2, 5, 8],
[0, 4, 8],
[2, 4, 6]
];
for (let i = 0; i < lines.length; i++) {
const [a, b, c] = lines[i];
if (squares[a] && squares[a] === squares[b] && squares[a] === squares[c]) {
return squares[a];
}
}
return null;
}
Installation
With npm:
npm install --save @amplitude/react-amplitude
With yarn:
yarn add @amplitude/react-amplitude
react-amplitude does not come with its own copy of the Amplitude JavaScript SDK. You can either install the Amplitude SDK via npm or with a JavaScript snippet.
API
AmplitudeProvider props
amplitudeInstance
A required prop. You should be providing an Amplitude instance returned from the Amplitude JS SDK's getInstance
method.
apiKey
An optional prop that can be used to initialize the Amplitude instance with the provided key.
userId
An optional prop that can be used to attribute all events to a specific user.
Amplitude props
children
If can pass a function as the children prop, it will be called with a single object parameter, and the return value of that function will be used for rendering the actual React subtree.
The single object parameter has two useful fields: logEvent
and instrument
.
logEvent
is a function that can be used to imperatively log events. All event properties from this component's eventProperties
prop and any inherited properties will be included in these events.
Example:
function Button(props) {
return (
<Amplitude>
{({ logEvent }) =>
<button
onClick={() => {
logEvent('button click');
props.onClick();
}}
>
{props.children}
</button>
}
</Amplitude>
)
}
instrument
is a function that can be used to declaratively log events. If you have pre-existing event handlers, just wrap the functions with an instrument
, and events will fire every time your normal event handlers are executed. instrument
takes two parameters, the event type and the function to proxy.
instrument
is also useful if you would like to prevent re-rendering via shouldComponentUpdate optimizations like PureComponent. It memoizes its arguments and returns the same function instance across re-renders. For this reason, it's not recommended to use instrument
for functions that change on every render (i.e. inlined or "arrow" functions in render
).
Example:
function Button(props) {
return (
<Amplitude>
{({ instrument }) =>
<button
onClick={instrument('button click', props.onClick)}
>
{props.children}
</button>
}
</Amplitude>
)
}
eventProperties
If an object is provided, the object will be merged with event properties higher-up in the component hierarchy and included in all events logged in this component or any components in its subtree.
If a function is provided, it will be called with a single parameter, inheritedProperties
, that contains all of the event properties from components higher in the React component hierarchy. The return value from this function will be used for all logged events in this component or other components in its subtree.
debounceInterval
If provided, events logged by the component will be debounced by this amount, in milliseconds.
userProperties
An optional object that if provided, will trigger updates to the current user's "user properties."
LogOnMount props
eventType
When this component mounts, it will log an event with this value as the event type.
eventProperties
These properties will be applied to the event when the component mounts.
instanceName
THe Amplitude instance to log events to.
LogOnChange props
value
Required prop, that when changes (diffing is done with shallow equality comparison), logs an event.
eventType
When the value
prop changes, it will log an event with this value as the event type.
eventProperties
These properties will be applied to the event when the component mounts.
instanceName
The Amplitude instance to log events to.
License
MIT
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