TL;DR:
I built a small (1.5kb) and performant event tracking library, that lets you connect with any tracking provider (GA, MixPanel, etc) with its simple API.
- Demo: https://codesandbox.io/embed/sharp-rain-jr0m6?fontsize=14
- Library: https://www.npmjs.com/package/treacker
- Docs: https://github.com/Badiapp/treacker
Why another tracking library
Tracking solutions like React tracker or React tracking solve the tracking the challenge coming for a perspective that data is present at the moment the tracking event is being triggered, meaning that the data needed to track an event is available from time 0.
Which in reality it's not. Let's see the following example:
const Component = ({ userId, roomId }) => {
const tracking = useTracking()
useEffect(() => {
tracking.trackEvent({ action: 'invite_sent', userId, roomId })
}, [])
// the rest of my component
}
But, what if because of the architecture of the application, the asynchronous nature of nowadays applications (or any other reason)the userId
or roomId
values are not available when mounting the component, the tracking event won't report the correct data.
Having a condition could fix the problem:
const Component = ({ userId, roomId }) => {
const tracking = useTracking()
useEffect(() => {
if(!userId || !roomId) return
tracking.trackEvent({ action: 'invite_sent', userId, roomId })
}, [userId, roomId])
// the rest of my component
}
But I will need to do this do it over and over across the application, this starts to be unmaintainable and too verbose. Instead, what if there could be a way to let the "tracking system" manage that for us, what if the data integrity is part of the responsibilities of this "tracking system".
The proposal
I want to create a tool that:
- Works with vanilla JS and React is just an abstraction, so it's not dependant of React architecture constraints.
- Its responsibility is to ensure the tracking data integrity
- Provides a declarative interface
- It is agnostic of the transport service is used on the project to track the events
- Has a simple, yet powerful interface
Say hello to Treacker
(Tracking + React) = Treacker đ€Ż
Treacker takes the following assumptions on the application architecture:
- The part of the code in which the "tracking provider" is declared knows about the base data that will need to be tracked (ex. userId, userRole, appVersion), let's say, the global/high-level data
Said that let's see how it works:
- Declare a
TrackingProvider
- Everything you want to track should be inside the Provider tree
- Access the provider either using
TrackingContext
oruseTracking
hook
Demo
Example
- I have will request
getRooms
and received as a listrooms
as props, in which I will track the mounting of each room on the list - I have a component that will show info on a user called
UserComponent
that will be shown after doing a request to the server in which I will track when mounting
import { useState, useEffect } from 'react'
import { TrackingProvider } from 'treacker'
import UserComponent from './user-component'
import Room from './room'
const INITIAL_PARAMS = {
locale: 'en',
app_version: 1
}
const handleOnTrackingEvent = event => {
// do stuff when the event has been fired.
// like reporting to Google Analytics or Mixpanel
// signature { eventName, params, timestamp }
}
const Layout = ({ getUser, getRoom, rooms }) => {
const [ready, setReady] = useState(false)
const [params, setParams] = useState(INITIAL_PARAMS)
useEffect(() => {
getUser().then((user) => {
// update the parameters for the provider
setParams(state => ({
...state,
userRole: user.role,
userId: user.id,
})
setReady(true)
})
getRoom()
}, [])
return (
<TrackingProvider params={params} onTrackingEvent={handleOnTrackingEvent} isReady={ready}>
<UserComponent {...user} />
{
rooms.map(room => <Room {...room} />)
}
</TrackingProvider>
)
}
The UserComponent
:
import { useEffect } from 'react'
import { useTracking } from 'treacker'
const UserComponent = () => {
const tracking = useTracking()
useEffect(() => {
tracking.track('user-component.loaded')
}, [])
return (
// ... the component implementation
)
}
Then the room component:
import { useEffect } from 'react'
import { useTracking } from 'treacker'
const Room = ({ roomId }) => {
const tracking = useTracking()
useEffect(() => {
tracking.track('room.loaded', { roomId })
}, [])
return (
// ... the component implementation
)
}
So what's happening here?
-
TrackingProvider
has 3 main props: -
onTrackingEvent
, which will be invoked each time there is a tracking event -
params
, this is going to be the global parameters that will be sent with each event -
isReady
is the flag that will let know when it's "safe" to dispatch the events
For more info on how the event signature looks like, check the docs.
Even if the data is not ready, for example like UserComponent
that mounts before fetching the userData, the events stay in a queue and are dispatched only after knowing that is safe by the isReady
flag on TrackingProvider
.
More about the interface
withTracking
The library exposes also a HOC withTracking
which is useful when the component is not part of the TrackingProvider
tree.
registering listeners
In case you need to register more event listeners to the trackingProvider, it's possible using registerListener
.
Final words
I found the approach to be useful in my use case and that's why I thought to share it, hopefully it will be useful for you too!
Check the docs for more details, or the demo in codesandbox.
Top comments (6)
Cool but why? Google Analytics has already super easy to use API, advanced dashboards
It's not excluding GA, it plays with it. Tracking libraries, like this one, helps you to create an abstraction of GA or Mixpanel, or NewRelic so your code doesn't depend on their specific API.
By using Treacker you can move the "event reporting" to a function that only knows when it's being called with certain signature. Also, let's say that you change from GA to MixPanel or Segment, then, with this, it will be easier because there are not implementation details on your code.
I was having some problems with my event tracking and was about to rewrite everything when I saw this, so I cut over everything to it. So far, it actually looks really nice and effective. In my handleOnTrackingEvent, I'm just sending everything to an abstract 'track' which then calls trackGA or trackMixpanel for all the events so that I can do some extra parsing.
The only thing I don't see an obvious way to handle is how to do tracking from a redux action creator. My best guess is to just use the vanilla example and adapt it, but if you could provide any guidance or examples, it would be dearly appreciated before I get too far down the rabbit hole.
Wow talk about coincidence! I was just looking for a React-based tracking library and was wondering why there isn't much other than the NY Times' solution.
Looks awesome, can't wait to try it out
How to use this tracker in class component. it support only functional component.
Hi @sathaan ! the version 1.0.2 exposes the TrackingContext and TrackingProvider in case you want to use it with a class component or a function components without hooks: github.com/Badiapp/treacker#using-...