Gathering detailed insights and metrics for @gtm-support/vue2-gtm
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for @gtm-support/vue2-gtm
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for @gtm-support/vue2-gtm
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for @gtm-support/vue2-gtm
npm install @gtm-support/vue2-gtm
56.5
Supply Chain
98.8
Quality
75.5
Maintenance
50
Vulnerability
99.6
License
Module System
Min. Node Version
Typescript Support
Node Version
NPM Version
214 Stars
101 Commits
27 Forks
2 Watching
5 Branches
9 Contributors
Updated on 20 Nov 2024
Minified
Minified + Gzipped
TypeScript (84.7%)
JavaScript (15.3%)
Cumulative downloads
Total Downloads
Last day
-3.8%
3,268
Compared to previous day
Last week
-3.1%
16,956
Compared to previous week
Last month
-2.2%
76,954
Compared to previous month
Last year
-34.1%
976,408
Compared to previous year
1
1
19
This plugin will help you in your common GTM tasks.
Note: If you are looking to track all Vuex mutations, you can use Vuex GTM plugin
Optional dependencies
npm install @gtm-support/vue-gtm
Here is an example configuration:
1import { createApp } from 'vue';
2import { createGtm } from '@gtm-support/vue-gtm';
3import router from './router';
4
5const app = createApp(App);
6
7app.use(router);
8
9app.use(
10 createGtm({
11 id: 'GTM-xxxxxx', // Your GTM single container ID, array of container ids ['GTM-xxxxxx', 'GTM-yyyyyy'] or array of objects [{id: 'GTM-xxxxxx', queryParams: { gtm_auth: 'abc123', gtm_preview: 'env-4', gtm_cookies_win: 'x'}}, {id: 'GTM-yyyyyy', queryParams: {gtm_auth: 'abc234', gtm_preview: 'env-5', gtm_cookies_win: 'x'}}], // Your GTM single container ID or array of container ids ['GTM-xxxxxx', 'GTM-yyyyyy']
12 queryParams: {
13 // Add URL query string when loading gtm.js with GTM ID (required when using custom environments)
14 gtm_auth: 'AB7cDEf3GHIjkl-MnOP8qr',
15 gtm_preview: 'env-4',
16 gtm_cookies_win: 'x',
17 },
18 source: 'https://customurl.com/gtm.js', // Add your own serverside GTM script
19 defer: false, // Script can be set to `defer` to speed up page load at the cost of less accurate results (in case visitor leaves before script is loaded, which is unlikely but possible). Defaults to false, so the script is loaded `async` by default
20 compatibility: false, // Will add `async` and `defer` to the script tag to not block requests for old browsers that do not support `async`
21 nonce: '2726c7f26c', // Will add `nonce` to the script tag
22 enabled: true, // defaults to true. Plugin can be disabled by setting this to false for Ex: enabled: !!GDPR_Cookie (optional)
23 debug: true, // Whether or not display console logs debugs (optional)
24 loadScript: true, // Whether or not to load the GTM Script (Helpful if you are including GTM manually, but need the dataLayer functionality in your components) (optional)
25 vueRouter: router, // Pass the router instance to automatically sync with router (optional)
26 ignoredViews: ['homepage'], // Don't trigger events for specified router names (optional)
27 trackOnNextTick: false, // Whether or not call trackView in Vue.nextTick
28 }),
29);
This injects the tag manager script in the page, except when enabled
is set to false
.
In that case it will be injected when calling this.$gtm.enable(true)
for the first time.
Remember to enable the History Change Trigger for router changes to be sent through GTM.
Once the configuration is completed, you can access vue gtm instance in your components like that:
1export default { 2 name: 'MyComponent', 3 data() { 4 return { 5 someData: false, 6 }; 7 }, 8 methods: { 9 onClick() { 10 this.$gtm.trackEvent({ 11 event: null, // Event type [default = 'interaction'] (Optional) 12 category: 'Calculator', 13 action: 'click', 14 label: 'Home page SIP calculator', 15 value: 5000, 16 noninteraction: false, // Optional 17 }); 18 }, 19 }, 20 mounted() { 21 this.$gtm.trackView('MyScreenName', 'currentPath'); 22 }, 23};
The passed variables are mapped with GTM data layer as follows
1dataLayer.push({ 2 event: event || 'interaction', 3 target: category, 4 action: action, 5 'target-properties': label, 6 value: value, 7 'interaction-type': noninteraction, 8 ...rest, 9});
You can also access the instance anywhere whenever you imported Vue
by using Vue.gtm
. It is especially useful when you are in a store module or somewhere else than a component's scope.
It's also possible to send completely custom data to GTM with just pushing something manually to dataLayer
:
1if (this.$gtm.enabled()) { 2 window.dataLayer?.push({ 3 event: 'myEvent', 4 // further parameters 5 }); 6}
Thanks to vue-router guards, you can automatically dispatch new screen views on router change! To use this feature, you just need to inject the router instance on plugin initialization.
This feature will generate the view name according to a priority rule:
gtm
this will take the value of this field for the view name.meta.gtm
it will fallback to the internal route name.Most of the time the second case is enough, but sometimes you want to have more control on what is sent, this is where the first rule shine.
Example:
1const myRoute = { 2 path: 'myRoute', 3 name: 'MyRouteName', 4 component: SomeComponent, 5 meta: { gtm: 'MyCustomValue' }, 6};
This will use
MyCustomValue
as the view name.
If your GTM setup expects custom data to be sent as part of your page views, you can add desired properties to your route definitions via the meta.gtmAdditionalEventData
property.
Example:
1const myRoute = { 2 path: 'myRoute', 3 name: 'myRouteName', 4 component: SomeComponent, 5 meta: { gtmAdditionalEventData: { routeCategory: 'INFO' } }, 6};
This sends the property
routeCategory
with the value 'INFO' as part of your page view event for that route.
Note that the properties event
, content-name
and content-view-name
are always overridden.
If you need to pass dynamic properties as part of your page views, you can set a callback that derives the custom data after navigation.
Example:
1createGtm({
2 // ...other options
3 vueRouter: router,
4 vueRouterAdditionalEventData: () => ({
5 someComputedProperty: computeProperty(),
6 }),
7});
This computes and sends the property
someComputedProperty
as part of your page view event after every navigation.
Note that a property with the same name on route level will override this.
In order to use this plugin with composition API (inside your setup
method), you can just call the custom composable useGtm
.
Example:
1<template> 2 <button @click="triggerEvent">Trigger event!</button> 3</template> 4 5<script> 6import { useGtm } from '@gtm-support/vue-gtm'; 7 8export default { 9 name: 'MyCustomComponent', 10 11 setup() { 12 const gtm = useGtm(); 13 14 function triggerEvent() { 15 gtm.trackEvent({ 16 event: 'event name', 17 category: 'category', 18 action: 'click', 19 label: 'My custom component trigger', 20 value: 5000, 21 noninteraction: false, 22 }); 23 } 24 25 return { 26 triggerEvent, 27 }; 28 }, 29}; 30</script>
Check if plugin is enabled
1this.$gtm.enabled();
Enable plugin
1this.$gtm.enable(true);
Disable plugin
1this.$gtm.enable(false);
Check if plugin is in debug mode
1this.$gtm.debugEnabled();
Enable debug mode
1this.$gtm.debug(true);
Disable debug mode
1this.$gtm.debug(false);
No vulnerabilities found.
Reason
no dangerous workflow patterns detected
Reason
no binaries found in the repo
Reason
all dependencies are pinned
Details
Reason
license file detected
Details
Reason
5 existing vulnerabilities detected
Details
Reason
Found 3/30 approved changesets -- score normalized to 1
Reason
detected GitHub workflow tokens with excessive permissions
Details
Reason
0 commit(s) and 0 issue activity found in the last 90 days -- score normalized to 0
Reason
no effort to earn an OpenSSF best practices badge detected
Reason
security policy file not detected
Details
Reason
project is not fuzzed
Details
Reason
SAST tool is not run on all commits -- score normalized to 0
Details
Score
Last Scanned on 2024-11-25
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