jQuery plug-in to provide custom analytics. For those of us who can not use Google Analytics at work or just want to dork with something else.
Bryan Allred c05a55ce00 Merge pull request #5 from bmallred/master | vor 11 Jahren | |
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.gitignore | vor 11 Jahren | |
MIT.license | vor 11 Jahren | |
README.md | vor 11 Jahren | |
example.html | vor 11 Jahren | |
jquery-analytics.js | vor 11 Jahren | |
jquery-analytics.min.js | vor 11 Jahren | |
minify.sh | vor 11 Jahren |
jQuery plug-in to provide custom analytics. For those of us who can not use Google Analytics at work or just want to dork with something else.
With just a few lines of code you can easily configure your own web page analytics. Just specify the URI you would like to communicate with and everything is a go.
$(function () {
$(".trace").analytics({
url: "http://localhost/trace"
});
});
Often you want to track more meaningful information instead of just page hits. Simply apply any number of custom attributes prefixed with data-analytics- and we will take care of the rest!
<a id="myLink" href="#" data-analytics-outfit="pajamas" data-analytics-shoes="slippers">My link</a>
This will send the following information back:
{
id: "myLink",
outfit: "pajamas",
shoes: "slippers"
}
It is also possible to track the flow of users while they visit your site by specifying their unique identifier. This can be done during initialization like so:
$(function () {
$(".trace").analytics({
url: "http://localhost/trace",
client: "unique identifier"
});
});