Tracking pageviews in single-page apps (SPA)
Jun 11, 2024
A single-page application (or SPA) dynamically loads content for new pages using JavaScript instead of loading new pages from the server. Ideally, this enables users to navigate around the app without waiting for new pages to load, providing a seamless user experience.
PostHog's JavaScript Web SDK automatically captures pageview events on page load. The problem with SPAs is that page loads don't happen beyond the initial one. This means user navigation in your SPA isn't tracked.
To fix this, you can implement pageview capture manually using custom events. This tutorial shows you how to do this for the most popular SPA frameworks like Next.js, Vue, Svelte, and Angular.
Prerequisite: Each of these requires you to have an app created and PostHog installed. To install the PostHog JavaScript Web SDK, run the following command for the package manager of your choice:
Terminal
yarn add posthog-js# ornpm install --save posthog-js# orpnpm add posthog-js
Tracking pageviews in Next.js (app router)
To add PostHog to your Next.js app, we start by creating the PostHogProvider
component in the app
folder. We set capture_pageview: false
because we will manually capture pageviews.
// app/providers.js'use client'import posthog from 'posthog-js'import { PostHogProvider } from 'posthog-js/react'import { useEffect } from 'react'export function PHProvider({ children }) {useEffect(() => {posthog.init('<ph_project_api_key>', {api_host: 'https://us.i.posthog.com',capture_pageview: false})}, []);return <PostHogProvider client={posthog}>{children}</PostHogProvider>}
To capture pageviews, we create another pageview.js
component in the app folder.
// app/pageview.js'use client'import { usePathname, useSearchParams } from "next/navigation";import { useEffect } from "react";import { usePostHog } from 'posthog-js/react';export default function PostHogPageView() {const pathname = usePathname();const searchParams = useSearchParams();const posthog = usePostHog();// Track pageviewsuseEffect(() => {if (pathname && posthog) {let url = window.origin + pathnameif (searchParams.toString()) {url = url + `?${searchParams.toString()}`}posthog.capture('$pageview',{'$current_url': url,})}}, [pathname, searchParams, posthog])return null}
Finally, we import both and put them together in the app/layout.js
file.
// app/layout.jsimport "./globals.css";import { PHProvider } from './providers'import dynamic from 'next/dynamic'const PostHogPageView = dynamic(() => import('./pageview'), {ssr: false,})export default function RootLayout({ children }) {return (<html lang="en"><PHProvider><body>{children}<PostHogPageView /></body></PHProvider></html>);}
Make sure to dynamically import the PostHogPageView
component or the useSearchParams
hook will deopt the entire app into client-side rendering.
Tracking pageviews in React Router
If you are using React Router AKA react-router-dom
, start by adding the PostHogProvider
component in the app
folder. Make sure to set capture_pageview: false
because we will manually capture pageviews.
// app/providers.js'use client'import posthog from 'posthog-js'import { PostHogProvider } from 'posthog-js/react'if (typeof window !== 'undefined') {posthog.init('<ph_project_api_key>', {api_host: 'https://us.i.posthog.com',capture_pageview: false})}export function PHProvider({ children }) {return <PostHogProvider client={posthog}>{children}</PostHogProvider>}
To capture pageviews, we create another pageview.js
component in the app folder.
// app/pageview.jsimport { useEffect } from "react";import { useLocation } from 'react-router-dom';export default function PostHogPageView() {let location = useLocation();// Track pageviewsuseEffect(() => {if (posthog) {posthog.capture('$pageview',{'$current_url': window.location.href,})}}, [location])return null}
Finally, we import both and put them together in the app/layout.js
file.
import * as React from 'react';import { PHProvider } from './providers'import { PostHogPageView } from './pageview'function App() {return (<html lang="en"><PHProvider><body>{children}<PostHogPageView /></body></PHProvider></html>);}
Tracking pageviews in Vue
After creating a Vue app and setting up the vue-router
, create a new folder in the src/components
named plugins
. In this folder, create a file named posthog.js
. This is where we initialize PostHog.
// src/plugins/posthog.jsimport posthog from "posthog-js";export default {install(app) {app.config.globalProperties.$posthog = posthog.init("<ph_project_api_key>",{api_host: "https://us.i.posthog.com",capture_pageview: false});},};
After this, you can add the plugin to the main.js
file and use it along with the router to capture pageviews afterEach
route change.
// src/main.jsimport { createApp, nextTick } from 'vue'import App from './App.vue'import router from './router'import posthogPlugin from '../plugins/posthog';const app = createApp(App);app.use(posthogPlugin).use(router).mount('#app');router.afterEach((to, from, failure) => {if (!failure) {nextTick(() => {app.config.globalProperties.$posthog.capture('$pageview',{ path: to.fullPath });});}});
Tracking pageviews in Svelte
If you haven't already, start by creating a +layout.js
file for your Svelte app in your src/routes
folder. In it, add the code to initialize PostHog.
// src/routes/+layout.jsimport posthog from 'posthog-js'import { browser } from '$app/environment';export const load = async () => {if (browser) {posthog.init('<ph_project_api_key>',{api_host: 'https://us.i.posthog.com',capture_pageview: false})}return};
After that, create a +layout.svelte
file in src/routes
. In it, use the afterNavigate
interceptor to capture pageviews.
<!-- src/routes/+layout.svelte --><script>import posthog from 'posthog-js'import { browser } from '$app/environment';import { beforeNavigate, afterNavigate } from '$app/navigation';if (browser) {afterNavigate(() => posthog.capture('$pageview'));}</script><slot></slot>
Tracking pageviews in Angular
To start tracking pageviews in Angular, begin by initializing PostHog in src/main.ts
.
import { bootstrapApplication } from '@angular/platform-browser';import { appConfig } from './app/app.config';import { AppComponent } from './app/app.component';import posthog from 'posthog-js';posthog.init('<ph_project_api_key>',{api_host: 'https://us.i.posthog.com',capture_pageview: false});bootstrapApplication(AppComponent, appConfig).catch((err) => console.error(err));
After setting up your routes and router, you can capture pageviews by subscribing to navigationEnd
events in app.component.ts
.
import { Component } from '@angular/core';import { RouterOutlet, Router, Event, NavigationEnd } from '@angular/router';import { filter } from 'rxjs/operators';import { Observable } from 'rxjs';import posthog from 'posthog-js';@Component({selector: 'app-root',standalone: true,imports: [RouterOutlet],templateUrl: './app.component.html',styleUrl: './app.component.css'})export class AppComponent {title = 'angular-spa';navigationEnd: Observable<NavigationEnd>;constructor(public router: Router) {this.navigationEnd = router.events.pipe(filter((event: Event) => event instanceof NavigationEnd)) as Observable<NavigationEnd>;}ngOnInit() {this.navigationEnd.subscribe((event: NavigationEnd) => {posthog.capture('$pageview');});}}
Further reading
- What to do after installing PostHog in 5 steps
- What engineers get wrong about analytics
- Complete guide to event tracking
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