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Aurelia-Google-Analytics

An Aurelia plugin that adds Google Analytics page tracking to your application with just a small amount of configuration. Set it up once and forget about it.

This plugin was built based on this blog post.

Getting Started

jspm install aurelia-google-analytics

# or ...
npm install aurelia-google-analytics --save
export function configure(aurelia) {
	aurelia.use.plugin('aurelia-google-analytics', config => {
		const options = {
			logging: {
				// Set to `true` to have some log messages appear in the browser console.
				enabled: true
			},
			pageTracking: {
				// Set to `false` to disable in non-production environments.
				enabled: true,
				// Configure fragments/routes/route names to ignore page tracking for
				ignore: {
					fragments: [], // Ignore a route fragment, login fragment for example: ['/login']
					routes: [], // Ignore a route, login route for example: ['login']
					routeNames: [] // Ignore a route name, login route name for example: ['login-route']
				},
				// Optional. By default it gets the title from payload.instruction.config.title.
				getTitle: (payload) => {
					// For example, if you want to retrieve the tile from the document instead override with the following.
					return document.title;
				},
				// Optional. By default it gets the URL fragment from payload.instruction.fragment.
				getUrl: (payload) => {
					// For example, if you want to get full URL each time override with the following.
					return window.location.href;
				}
			},
			clickTracking: {
				// Set to `false` to disable in non-production environments.
				enabled: true,
				// Optional. By default it tracks clicks on anchors and buttons.
				filter: (element) => {
					// For example, if you want to also track clicks on span elements override with the following.
					return element instanceof HTMLElement &&
						(element.nodeName.toLowerCase() === 'a' ||
							element.nodeName.toLowerCase() === 'button' ||
							element.nodeName.toLowerCase() === 'span');
				}
			},
			exceptionTracking: {
				// Set to `false` to disable in non-production environments.
				enabled: true
			}
		};
		config.attach(options);
		config.init('<Your Tracker ID>');
	});

	aurelia.start().then(a => a.setRoot());
}
"deepmerge",
{
	"name": "aurelia-google-analytics",
	"path": "../node_modules/aurelia-google-analytics/dist/amd",
	"main": "index"
}

In order to use the click tracking feature, each HTML element you want to track must contain a data-analytics-category and data-analytics-action attribute. data-analytics-label and data-analytics-value are supported and optional.

Alternative trackings

For custom trackings, for example, if you want to use the simplicity of the aurelia-google-analytics but tracking using Google Tag Manager (GTM) ou similars, you can use custom functions passing these function in options.

In this case, see options below:

options.useNativeGaScript (default: true)

Passing false in this option to disable native script of GA. The aurelia-google-analytics don't load the <script> tag to Google Analytics (GA). It's good when you load GA from GTM for example.

With this option disabled, the aurelia-google-analytics automatically set internal lib as loaded, so you don't need to execute config.init.

options.pageTracking.customFnTrack (default: false)

You can pass a function in this option to customize the tracking of pages. For example, if you use GTM, perhaps do you want to track events sending data to you dataLayer variable.

For example:


const options = {
	// ...
	pageTracking: {
		customFnTrack: (props) => {
			console.log(props);
			/*
			prints in console:
			{ 
				page: '',
				title: '',
				anonymizeIp: true/false
			}
			*/
			window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || [];
			window.dataLayer.push(Object.assign(
				{
				event: 'virtual-page-tracking',
				},
				props
			));
		}
	}
	// ...
}

options.clickTracking.customFnTrack (default: false)

Same of options.pageTracking.customFnTrack, but for links.

For example:


const options = {
	// ...
	clickTracking: {
		customFnTrack: (props) => {
			console.log(props);
			/*
			prints in console:
			{ 
				category: // value of atribute 'data-analytics-category',
				action: // value of atribute 'data-analytics-action',
				label: // value of atribute 'data-analytics-label',
				value: // value of atribute 'data-analytics-value'
			}
			*/
			window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || [];
			window.dataLayer.push(Object.assign(
				{
				event: 'ga-event',
				},
				props
			));
		}
	}
	// ...
}

Building from source

Install dependencies

npm install

Then

gulp build

The result is 3 module formats separated by folder in dist/.

Dependencies

Pull Requests

Yes, please!