react-track-events
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0.0.6 • Public • Published

react-track-events

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Simple React wrapper for Components to track events.

Usage

import { createTracker } from 'react-track-events';

const trackElement = createTracker((event) => {
  // Will be called each time a tracked event is fired with:
  // {
  //   eventName: event like 'onClick',
  //   ComponentType: something like `Dropdown`,
  //   info?: 'whatever you passed to the trackEvent attribute (or return value of it being a function)'
  //   breadcrumbs: array of <Breadcrumb> crumbs wrapping the node
  //   args: [nativeEvent, ...args] // args passed to the event handler,
  //   returnValue?: Whatever the event handler returned
  //   thisContext?: context the event handler was called with;
  // }
});

// Create a simple tracker for a div
const Div = trackElement.trackIntrinsicElement('div');
const trackedDiv = <Div trackClick>I'm being tracked</Div>;

// OR use the returned intrinsicElements object
const tracked = trackElement.intrinsicElements;
const trackedDiv = <tracked.div trackClick>I'm being tracked</tracked.div>;

const untrackedDiv = <Div>I'm not because there's no trackClick attribute</Div>;

const ClickTrackedDiv = trackElement.trackIntrinsicElement('div', {
  alwaysTrack: ['onClick'],
});
// OR
const ClickTrackedDiv = trackElement.withOptions({
  alwaysTrack: ['onClick'],
}).div;

const clickTrackedDiv = <ClickTrackedDiv>I'm being tracked</ClickTrackedDiv>;
const autoTrackedDivWithFocus = (
  <ClickTrackedDiv trackFocus>
    I'm being tracked for clicks and focus
  </ClickTrackedDiv>
);
const noClickTrackedDiv = (
  <ClickTrackedDiv trackClick={false}>Not tracked</ClickTrackedDiv>
);

// You can pass trackClick a value that will be passed to the tracker as the info property
// event.info will be "some info"
const trackedDivWithInfo = <Div trackClick="some info">I'm being tracked</Div>;

// event.info will be `{ foo: 123 }`
const trackedDivWithComplexInfo = <Div trackClick={{ foo: 123 }}>tracked</Div>;

// You can also pass a function will will then pass the return value as the info property
// In this case event.info will be "my-class"
const trackedDivWithFn = (
  <Div className="my-class" trackClick={(e) => e.target.className}>
    Tracked with function
  </Div>
);

// You can track any React element, for example a Material UI Checkbox
const AutoTrackedCheckbox = trackElement(Checkbox, {
  alwaysTrack: ['onChange'],
});
const autoTrackedCheckbox = <AutoTrackedCheckbox />;

const TrackedCheckbox = trackElement(Checkbox);
// The function can pass important info about the event to the onEvent handler
const box = (
  <TrackedCheckbox trackChange={(event, value) => `checkbox-${value}`} />
);
// The above will pass 'checkbox-true' or 'checkbox-false' to the onEvent handler

Typescript

Beside the original typings of the tracked element (eg form having onSubmit, and Checkbox having onChange) you can also supply a generic type to createTracker to specify the type of the info property of the event and what should be passed in the trackFoo props.

const trackStringyElement = createTracker<string>((event) => {
  // event.info will be a string
});
const Div = trackStringyElement.intrinsicElements.div;
const trackedDivGood = <Div trackClick="some info">I'm being tracked</Div>; // OK
const trackedDivBad1 = <Div>trackClick is required</Div>; // Type Error
const trackedDivBad2 = <Div trackClick>trackClick needs to be a string</Div>; // Type Error

const trackComplexElement = createTracker<
  string | { feature: string; attributes: any }
>((event) => {
  const isString = typeof event.info === 'string';
  const info = isString ? { feature: event.info } : event.info;
  // analytics.track(info);
});
const D2 = trackStringyElement.intrinsicElements('div');
const trackedDiv1 = <D2 trackClick="foo" />; // OK
const trackedDiv2 = <D2 trackClick={{ feature: 'bar', attributes: 123 }} />; // OK
const trackedDiv3 = <D2 trackClick={{ attributes: 123 }} />; // Type Error

In the examples above the breadcrumbs property will be an empty array since no <Breadcrumbs /> were provided. You can wrap any parent component with <Breadcrumbs /> to provide a list of breadcrumbs to the event handler. This can be used to know which section of a page a Checkbox was toggled or a link was clicked. For example:

const App = () => {
  return (
    <>
      <Breadcrumb name="header">
        <Header />
      </Breadcrumb>
      <Breadcrumb name="layout">
        <Layout />
      </Breadcrumb>
    </>
  );
};

const Layout = () => {
  return (
    <div>
      <Breadcrumb crumb="section1">
        <Section1 />
      </Breadcrumb>
      <Breadcrumb crumb="section2">
        <Section2 />
      </Breadcrumb>
      <Breadcrumb crumb="section3">
        <Section3 />
      </Breadcrumb>
    </div>
  );
};

const Section2 = () => <tracked.div trackClick>Tracked</tracked.div>;

The tracked.div will have ['layout', 'section2'] as the breadcrumb value.

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Install

npm i react-track-events

Weekly Downloads

1

Version

0.0.6

License

MIT

Unpacked Size

72.3 kB

Total Files

15

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Collaborators

  • kolodny