This package will be your best friend if you need to track events for your Laravel application in Amplitude.
This package is compatible with the 5.8 version of Laravel.
You can install the package via composer:
composer require francescomalatesta/laravel-amplitude
Do not forget to publish the config file with Artisan:
artisan vendor:publish
To be up and running, just add the Amplitude API Key of your project in the .env
file, using AMPLITUDE_API_KEY
as key.
If you want to use the Amplitude
facade, remember to add the following line to your config/app.php
, in the aliases
item.
'aliases' => [
...
'Amplitude' => LaravelAmplitude\Facades\Amplitude::class
]
Laravel Amplitude uses a simple syntax to track your product events easily.
First of all, before sending anything, you will need to set the User ID.
Amplitude::setUserId('user_id');
Note: setting the user id is MANDATORY. Otherwise, you will get an error when trying to send data to Amplitude.
Once the user id is set, you are ready to send events to your Amplitude project.
// simple sending...
Amplitude::sendEvent('app_opened');
// sending with properties...
Amplitude::sendEvent('subscription_paid', ['was_trial' => true]);
Also, you can change the user properties with the dedicated method setUserProperties
:
// properties new values are set here
Amplitude::setUserProperties([
'trial' => false,
'plan' => 'professional'
]);
// data is sent to Amplitude here
Amplitude::sendEvent('subscription_paid', ['was_trial' => true]);
IMPORTANT: the properties will be sent to Amplitude at the next sendEvent
call. Without any other call to sendEvent
, the new user properties are not going to be saved.
If send a lot of events and you want to keep your performances good, you may choose events queueing instead of the simple sending you just saw.
With events queueing, you will send all your events once the request is over, instead of making different API calls during the request lifecycle.
To use it, just switch your sendEvent
calls to queueEvent
method.
// simple sending...
Amplitude::queueEvent('app_opened');
// sending with properties...
Amplitude::queueEvent('subscription_paid', ['was_trial' => true]);
Nothing more to do! When the request will be finished, Laravel Amplitude will automatically trigger the send operation of your data.
However, if you want more control and you want to send your queued events in your code, you can do it manually with a call to the sendQueuedEvents
method.
// queueing an event...
Amplitude::queueEvent('app_opened');
// queueing another event...
Amplitude::queueEvent('subscription_paid', ['was_trial' => true]);
// send them!
Amplitude::sendQueuedEvents();
Please see CHANGELOG for more information what has changed recently.
Please see CONTRIBUTING for details.
If you discover any security related issues, please email francesco@ahia.store instead of using the issue tracker.
The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.