Compare commits

..

No commits in common. "f068e40da19ccdacd4a544f8d15ac00336f96927" and "c4d023c2a17bc243a864ca41208426de0917491e" have entirely different histories.

3 changed files with 0 additions and 97 deletions

View file

@ -1,47 +0,0 @@
Thanks to @mbjones[1] helpful post on sending Bear upvotes to Umami[2], I was able to fumble through implementing the same behavior on my site with Cabin[3]'s event tracking[4].
=> https://social.lol/@mbjones 1: @mbjones
=> https://wand3r.net/creating-an-upvote-button-in-umami/ 2: sending Bear upvotes to Umami
=> https://withcabin.com/ 3: Cabin
=> https://docs.withcabin.com/events.html 4: event tracking
Brandon's approach was to use this script added to the site's footer directives to add an event attribute to the upvote button:
```
script>
window.onload = function() {
// Get the button element by its class name
var button = document.getElementsByClassName('upvote-button')[0];
// Set a new attribute, for example, 'disabled'
button.setAttribute('data-umami-event', " {{ post_title }}");
};
script>
```
That *did* successfully set the attribute on my site, but clicks weren't showing up in the Cabin dashboard for some reason. So I switched tactics and opted to use the `cabin.event()` function instead:
```
script>
window.onload = function() {
var button = document.querySelector('.upvote-button');
if (button) {
button.addEventListener('click', function(event) {
cabin.event("upvote {{ post_title }}");
});
}
};
script>
```
And that did the trick!
Analytics screenshot showing upvote events being tracked for a few blog posts.[1]
=> https://bear-images.sfo2.cdn.digitaloceanspaces.com/jbowdre-1718942666.png 1: Analytics screenshot showing upvote events being tracked for a few blog posts.
Neat! Now that I have this knowledge I should be able to set up something similar on my other sites as well.
Big thanks to Brandon for getting me pointed in the right direction!
=> https://blog.jbowdre.lol/tracking-bear-upvotes-from-my-cabin/ 📡 Originally posted on jbowdre's weblog

View file

@ -1,4 +0,0 @@
id: "urn:uuid:36dfd09a-7e6b-4b7f-88ad-250ef7349e70"
title: "Tracking Bear upvotes from my Cabin"
published: "2024-06-21T04:08:43.542298Z"
updated: "2024-06-21T04:08:43.542298Z"

View file

@ -1,46 +0,0 @@
---
title: "Tracking Bear upvotes from my Cabin"
published: "2024-06-21T04:08:43.542298Z"
updated: "2024-06-21T04:08:43.542298Z"
---
Thanks to [@mbjones](https://social.lol/@mbjones) helpful post on [sending Bear upvotes to Umami](https://wand3r.net/creating-an-upvote-button-in-umami/), I was able to fumble through implementing the same behavior on my site with [Cabin](https://withcabin.com/)'s [event tracking](https://docs.withcabin.com/events.html).
Brandon's approach was to use this script added to the site's footer directives to add an event attribute to the upvote button:
```
script>
window.onload = function() {
// Get the button element by its class name
var button = document.getElementsByClassName('upvote-button')[0];
// Set a new attribute, for example, 'disabled'
button.setAttribute('data-umami-event', " {{ post_title }}");
};
script>
```
That *did* successfully set the attribute on my site, but clicks weren't showing up in the Cabin dashboard for some reason. So I switched tactics and opted to use the `cabin.event()` function instead:
```
script>
window.onload = function() {
var button = document.querySelector('.upvote-button');
if (button) {
button.addEventListener('click', function(event) {
cabin.event("upvote {{ post_title }}");
});
}
};
script>
```
And that did the trick!
![Analytics screenshot showing upvote events being tracked for a few blog posts.](https://bear-images.sfo2.cdn.digitaloceanspaces.com/jbowdre-1718942666.png)
Neat! Now that I have this knowledge I should be able to set up something similar on my other sites as well.
Big thanks to Brandon for getting me pointed in the right direction!
=> https://blog.jbowdre.lol/tracking-bear-upvotes-from-my-cabin/ 📡 Originally posted on jbowdre's weblog