Skip to content

phonegap-build/GAPlugin

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

49 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

GAPlugin

Google Analytics plugin for iOS and Android. This allows you to post usage information to your Google Analytics account.

Preparation:

Before you can begin collecting metrics data, you need to set up a GoogleAnalytics Mobile App account so you can view them. When you do so, you will obtain an app tracking id which we'll use during session initialization. Start by going to the Google Analytics site and click on the Create an Account button. Once signed in, click on the Admin button and the + New Account button under the Accounts tab. At the top of the resulting tab, select the App button in answer to the What would you like to track? query. Fill out the form as appropriate. Complete instructions can be found here.

Installation:

local

Add the following feature tag in your config.xml

<feature name="GAPlugin" >
	< param name="android-package" value="com.adobe.plugins.GAPlugin"/>
</feature>

This plugin is based on plugman. to install it to your app, simply execute plugman as follows;

plugman install --platform [PLATFORM] --project [TARGET-PATH] --plugin [PLUGIN-PATH]

where
	[PLATFORM] = ios or android
	[TARGET-PATH] = path to folder containing your xcode project
	[PLUGIN-PATH] = path to folder containing this plugin

For additional info, take a look at the Plugman Documentation

PhoneGap Build

To use this plugin with PhoneGap Build, add the following plugin reference to your config.xml

<gap:plugin name="com.adobe.plugins.gaplugin" />

Usage

The plugin creates the object `window.plugins.gaPlugin

After onDeviceReady, create a local var and startup the plugin like so;

var gaPlugin;

function onDeviceReady() {
	gaPlugin = window.plugins.gaPlugin;
	gaPlugin.init(successHandler, errorHandler, "UA-12345678-1", 10);
}

To get things rolling you need to call init() when your device ready function fires. Init takes 4 arguments; 1) success - a function that will be called on success 2) fail - a function that will be called on error. 3) id - Your Google Analytics account ID of the form; UA-XXXXXXXX-X This is the account ID you were given when you signed up. 4) period - An integer containing the minimum number of seconds between upload of metrics. When metics are logged, they are enqued and are sent out in batches based on this value. You'll want to avoid setting this value too low, to limit the overhead of sending data.

Example:

gaPlugin.init(successHandler, errorHandler, "UA-12345678-1", 10);

To track an event, call (oddly enough) trackEvent(). trackEvent takes 6 arguments;

1)	resultHandler - a function that will be called on success
2)	errorHandler - a function that will be called on error.
3)	category - This is the type of event you are sending such as "Button", "Menu", etc.
4)	eventAction - This is the type of event you are sending such as "Click", "Select". etc.
5)	eventLabel - A label that describes the event such as Button title or Menu Item name.
6)	eventValue - An application defined integer value that can mean whatever you want it to mean.

Example:

gaPlugin.trackEvent( nativePluginResultHandler, nativePluginErrorHandler, "Button", "Click", "event only", 1);

TrackEvent covers most of what you need, but there may be cases where you want to pass arbitrary data. setVariable() lets you pass values by index (Up to 20, on free accounts). For free accounts, each variable is given an index from 1 - 20. Reusing an existing index simply overwrites the previous value. Passing an index out of range fails silently, with no data sent. The variables will be sent ONLY for the next trackEvent or trackPage, after which those indexes will be available for reuse. setVariable() accepts 4 arguments;

1)	resultHandler - a function that will be called on success
2)	errorHandler - a function that will be called on error.
3)	index - the numerical index representing one of your variable slots (1-20).
4)	value - Arbitrary string data associated with the index.

Example:

gaPlugin.setVariable( nativePluginResultHandler, nativePluginErrorHandler, 1, "Purple");

####Important: Variable values are assigned to what Google calls Custom Dimensions in the dashboard. Prior to calling setVariable() in your client for a particular index, you need to create a slot in the GA dashboard. When you do so, you will be able to assign a name for the dimension, its index, and its scope. More info on creating Custom Dimensions can be found here. The next event or page view you send after setVariable will contain your variable at Custom Dimension specified by the index value you passed in the setVariable call. This Example app shows how you might use that next event to specify a label for the variable you just set.

In addition to events and variables, you can also log page visits with trackPage(). Unlike variables, however, page hits do not require a subsequent call to trackEvent() as they are considered unique events in and of themselves. trackPage() takes 3 arguments;

1)	resultHandler - a function that will be called on success
2)	errorHandler - a function that will be called on error.
3)	url - The url of the page hit you are logging.

Example:

gaPlugin.trackPage( nativePluginResultHandler, nativePluginErrorHandler, "some.url.com");

Finally, when your app shuts down, you'll want to cleanup after yourself by calling exit(); exit() accepts 2 arguments;

1)	resultHandler - a function that will be called on success
2)	errorHandler - a function that will be called on error.

Example:

gaPlugin.exit(nativePluginResultHandler, nativePluginErrorHandler);

This package includes an Example folder containing an index.html file showing how all of this fits together. Note that the contents of Examples does not get installed anywhere by pluginstall. Its just there to provide a usage example.

More Info

GAPlugin includes libraries from Google Analytics SDK for iOS and for Android. Use of those libraries is subject to Google Analytics Terms of Service

Also take a look at Google Analytics Developer Guides

License

The MIT License

Copyright (c) 2012 Bob Easterday, Adobe Systems

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

About

Google Analytics Plugin

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • JavaScript 71.0%
  • Objective-C 20.1%
  • CSS 6.7%
  • Java 2.2%