Data Subject Request API Version 1 and 2
Data Subject Request API Version 3
Platform API Overview
Accounts
Apps
Audiences
Calculated Attributes
Data Points
Feeds
Field Transformations
Services
Users
Workspaces
Warehouse Sync API Overview
Warehouse Sync API Tutorial
Warehouse Sync API Reference
Data Mapping
Warehouse Sync SQL Reference
Warehouse Sync Troubleshooting Guide
ComposeID
Warehouse Sync API v2 Migration
Bulk Profile Deletion API Reference
Calculated Attributes Seeding API
Custom Access Roles API
Data Planning API
Group Identity API Reference
Pixel Service
Profile API
Events API
mParticle JSON Schema Reference
IDSync
AMP SDK
Initialization
Configuration
Network Security Configuration
Event Tracking
User Attributes
IDSync
Screen Events
Commerce Events
Location Tracking
Media
Kits
Application State and Session Management
Data Privacy Controls
Error Tracking
Opt Out
Push Notifications
WebView Integration
Logger
Preventing Blocked HTTP Traffic with CNAME
Linting Data Plans
Troubleshooting the Android SDK
API Reference
Upgrade to Version 5
Direct URL Routing FAQ
Web
Android
iOS
Cordova Plugin
Identity
Initialization
Configuration
Event Tracking
User Attributes
IDSync
Screen Tracking
Commerce Events
Location Tracking
Media
Kits
Application State and Session Management
Data Privacy Controls
Error Tracking
Opt Out
Push Notifications
Webview Integration
Upload Frequency
App Extensions
Preventing Blocked HTTP Traffic with CNAME
Linting Data Plans
Troubleshooting iOS SDK
Social Networks
iOS 14 Guide
iOS 15 FAQ
iOS 16 FAQ
iOS 17 FAQ
iOS 18 FAQ
API Reference
Upgrade to Version 7
Getting Started
Identity
Upload Frequency
Getting Started
Opt Out
Initialize the SDK
Event Tracking
Commerce Tracking
Error Tracking
Screen Tracking
Identity
Location Tracking
Session Management
Getting Started
Identity
Initialization
Configuration
Content Security Policy
Event Tracking
User Attributes
IDSync
Page View Tracking
Commerce Events
Location Tracking
Media
Kits
Application State and Session Management
Data Privacy Controls
Error Tracking
Opt Out
Custom Logger
Persistence
Native Web Views
Self-Hosting
Multiple Instances
Web SDK via Google Tag Manager
Preventing Blocked HTTP Traffic with CNAME
Facebook Instant Articles
Troubleshooting the Web SDK
Browser Compatibility
Linting Data Plans
API Reference
Upgrade to Version 2 of the SDK
Web
Alexa
Overview
Step 1. Create an input
Step 2. Verify your input
Step 3. Set up your output
Step 4. Create a connection
Step 5. Verify your connection
Step 6. Track events
Step 7. Track user data
Step 8. Create a data plan
Step 9. Test your local app
Overview
Step 1. Create an input
Step 2. Verify your input
Step 3. Set up your output
Step 4. Create a connection
Step 5. Verify your connection
Step 6. Track events
Step 7. Track user data
Step 8. Create a data plan
Step 1. Create an input
Step 2. Create an output
Step 3. Verify output
Node SDK
Go SDK
Python SDK
Ruby SDK
Java SDK
Introduction
Outbound Integrations
Firehose Java SDK
Inbound Integrations
Compose ID
Data Hosting Locations
Glossary
Migrate from Segment to mParticle
Migrate from Segment to Client-side mParticle
Migrate from Segment to Server-side mParticle
Segment-to-mParticle Migration Reference
Rules Developer Guide
API Credential Management
The Developer's Guided Journey to mParticle
Create an Input
Start capturing data
Connect an Event Output
Create an Audience
Connect an Audience Output
Transform and Enhance Your Data
The new mParticle Experience
The Overview Map
Introduction
Data Retention
Connections
Activity
Live Stream
Data Filter
Rules
Tiered Events
mParticle Users and Roles
Analytics Free Trial
Troubleshooting mParticle
Usage metering for value-based pricing (VBP)
Introduction
Sync and Activate Analytics User Segments in mParticle
User Segment Activation
Welcome Page Announcements
Project Settings
Roles and Teammates
Organization Settings
Global Project Filters
Portfolio Analytics
Analytics Data Manager Overview
Events
Event Properties
User Properties
Revenue Mapping
Export Data
UTM Guide
Data Dictionary
Query Builder Overview
Modify Filters With And/Or Clauses
Query-time Sampling
Query Notes
Filter Where Clauses
Event vs. User Properties
Group By Clauses
Annotations
Cross-tool Compatibility
Apply All for Filter Where Clauses
Date Range and Time Settings Overview
Understanding the Screen View Event
Analyses Introduction
Getting Started
Visualization Options
For Clauses
Date Range and Time Settings
Calculator
Numerical Settings
Assisted Analysis
Properties Explorer
Frequency in Segmentation
Trends in Segmentation
Did [not] Perform Clauses
Cumulative vs. Non-Cumulative Analysis in Segmentation
Total Count of vs. Users Who Performed
Save Your Segmentation Analysis
Export Results in Segmentation
Explore Users from Segmentation
Getting Started with Funnels
Group By Settings
Conversion Window
Tracking Properties
Date Range and Time Settings
Visualization Options
Interpreting a Funnel Analysis
Group By
Filters
Conversion over Time
Conversion Order
Trends
Funnel Direction
Multi-path Funnels
Analyze as Cohort from Funnel
Save a Funnel Analysis
Explore Users from a Funnel
Export Results from a Funnel
Saved Analyses
Manage Analyses in Dashboards
Dashboards––Getting Started
Manage Dashboards
Organize Dashboards
Dashboard Filters
Scheduled Reports
Favorites
Time and Interval Settings in Dashboards
Query Notes in Dashboards
User Aliasing
The Demo Environment
Keyboard Shortcuts
Analytics for Marketers
Analytics for Product Managers
Compare Conversion Across Acquisition Sources
Analyze Product Feature Usage
Identify Points of User Friction
Time-based Subscription Analysis
Dashboard Tips and Tricks
Understand Product Stickiness
Optimize User Flow with A/B Testing
User Segments
IDSync Overview
Use Cases for IDSync
Components of IDSync
Store and Organize User Data
Identify Users
Default IDSync Configuration
Profile Conversion Strategy
Profile Link Strategy
Profile Isolation Strategy
Best Match Strategy
Aliasing
Overview
Create and Manage Group Definitions
Introduction
Catalog
Live Stream
Data Plans
Blocked Data Backfill Guide
Predictive Audiences Overview
Using Predictive Audiences
Predictive Attributes Overview
Create Predictive Attributes
Assess and Troubleshoot Predictions
Use Predictive Attributes in Campaigns
Introduction
Profiles
Warehouse Sync
Data Privacy Controls
Data Subject Requests
Default Service Limits
Feeds
Cross-Account Audience Sharing
Approved Sub-Processors
Import Data with CSV Files
CSV File Reference
Glossary
Video Index
Single Sign-On (SSO)
Setup Examples
Introduction
Introduction
Introduction
Rudderstack
Google Tag Manager
Segment
Advanced Data Warehouse Settings
AWS Kinesis (Snowplow)
AWS Redshift (Define Your Own Schema)
AWS S3 Integration (Define Your Own Schema)
AWS S3 (Snowplow Schema)
BigQuery (Snowplow Schema)
BigQuery Firebase Schema
BigQuery (Define Your Own Schema)
GCP BigQuery Export
Snowplow Schema Overview
Snowflake (Snowplow Schema)
Snowflake (Define Your Own Schema)
Aliasing
The SDK surfaces a series of APIs to associate “attributes” with a user. Attributes can be any set of free-form keys and values. It’s important to understand the following before reading on:
MParticleUser
objectAll users are associated with a signed 64-bit integer called the mParticle ID (MPID). Note that this value may be negative. Many mParticle integrations send data associated with an MPID. MPIDs are shared across devices depending on your IDSync strategy and usage of the IDSync API.
The SDK maintains a “current” user and will associate all events with the current user at the time that they occur. There are several ways to retrieve a reference to the current user object:
Query the SDK directly for the current user. Note that this is a non-blocking call so will be fast, but may return null on the first app launch if no IDSync API call has ever succeeded.
// Note: may return null if the SDK has yet to acquire a user via IDSync!
MParticleUser currentUser = MParticle.getInstance().Identity().getCurrentUser();
// Retrieve the mParticle ID of this user
long mpid = currentUser.getId();
// Note: may return null if the SDK has yet to acquire a user via IDSync!
val currentUser = MParticle.getInstance().Identity().currentUser
// Retrieve the mParticle ID of this user
val mpid = currentUser?.id
You can set a global listener to be alerted when the current user (or MPID) changes. This will only ever be called when the current MPID changes, such as on the initial application install or after an IDSync login or logout.
MParticle.getInstance().Identity().addIdentityStateListener(new IdentityStateListener() {
@Override
public void onUserIdentified(MParticleUser currentUser) {
//currentUser will never be null
long mpid = currentUser.getId();
}
});
MParticle.getInstance().Identity().addIdentityStateListener { currentUser ->
//currentUser will never be null
val mpid = currentUser.id
}
Whenever an IDSync API is invoked, the IdentityApiResult
object returned for a successful request will contain a reference to the new user object and mParticle ID. See the IDSync page for more information. Note that depending on your IDSync strategy, the MPID (and therefore the current user) may not change for every IDSync API call, such as for new user registration (login) scenarios.
User attributes are free-form key-value pairs. The underlying mParticle events API only accepts three types of values: strings, lists, and the JSON null sentinel in the case of tags. The Android SDK provides several helper methods that let you pass in non-strings - but these values will always be converted to strings. If you’re concerned about how this occurs for your values, you should convert the value to a string prior to passing it to the Android APIs.
// Note: may return null if the SDK has yet to acquire a user via IDSync!
MParticleUser currentUser = MParticle.getInstance().Identity().getCurrentUser();
// Set user attributes associated with the user
currentUser.setUserAttribute("top_region","Europe");
// You can change the value of an existing attribute at any time
currentUser.setUserAttribute("top_region","North America");
// Increment a user attribute by an integer value, this will:
// - look for an existing "trips_booked" value,
// - cast it to an integer and increment it
// - cast the result back to an string for storage and upload
currentUser.incrementUserAttribute("trips_booked", 1);
// Associate a list of values with an attribute key
List<String> attributeList = new ArrayList<>();
attributeList.add("Rome");
attributeList.add("San Juan");
attributeList.add("Denver");
currentUser.setUserAttributeList("destinations", attributeList);
// Remove attribute -
// all attributes for a given user share the same key space,
// you cannot have lists, tags and regular attributes with the same key
currentUser.removeUserAttribute("top_region");
// Note: may return null if the SDK has yet to acquire a user via IDSync!
val currentUser = MParticle.getInstance().Identity().currentUser
// Set user attributes associated with the user
currentUser?.setUserAttribute("top_region", "Europe")
// You can change the value of an existing attribute at any time
currentUser?.setUserAttribute("top_region", "North America")
// Increment a user attribute by an integer value, this will:
// - look for an existing "trips_booked" value,
// - cast it to an integer and increment it
// - cast the result back to an string for storage and upload
currentUser?.incrementUserAttribute("trips_booked", 1)
// Associate a list of values with an attribute key
val attributeList = ArrayList<String>()
attributeList.add("Rome")
attributeList.add("San Juan")
attributeList.add("Denver")
currentUser?.setUserAttributeList("destinations", attributeList)
// Remove attribute -
// all attributes for a given user share the same key space,
// you cannot have lists, tags and regular attributes with the same key
currentUser?.removeUserAttribute("platinum_member")
A tag is a label or category to which a user belongs. While the SDK sets a tag as a string, mParticle’s master data structure defines attributes as a map, so tags are stored with a null value. For example, when you set the "platinum_member"
tag on a user, the user profile will get the attribute "platinum_member": NULL
.
// Set tag
// Note: may return null if the SDK has yet to acquire a user via IDSync!
val currentUser = MParticle.getInstance().Identity().getCurrentUser();
currentUser.setUserTag("platinum_member");
// Remove tag
currentUser.removeUserAttribute("platinum_member");
// Set tag
// Note: may return null if the SDK has yet to acquire a user via IDSync!
val currentUser = MParticle.getInstance().Identity().currentUser
// Set tag
currentUser.setUserTag("platinum_member")
// Remove tag
currentUser.removeUserAttribute("platinum_member")
The SDK will upload an event whenever a user attribute changes to denote new attributes, changing attributes, and removed attributes. This is to allow for calculation of the current user attribute state for each event within an mParticle upload.
Below is a list of mParticle “reserved” user attribute keys. Several integrations use these keys for deterministic data mapping:
$Age
$FirstName
$LastName
$Gender
$Mobile
$Address
$City
$State
$Zip
$Country
The Android SDK surfaces an interface such that you can use these more easily - reference the complete API reference for more information.
Always refer to your organization’s data plan when instrumenting user or event attributes. Each unique attribute key becomes a data point in the mParticle user interface that can be filtered for each output, used to drive the calculation of an audience or become part of a custom mapping. This means that your choice of attribute keys can have a system-wide impact. For example, if you have a single attribute key per device that represents a unique user ID or a unique URL, and you have thousands of users, mParticle will see thousands of unique keys, even though you only create one per device.
Creating too many unique attribute keys can have several adverse effects:
You should avoid the following as attribute keys:
A gaming app has ten levels and you want to track which level each user has achieved. Rather than creating ten tags such “reachedLevel1”, “reachedLevel2”, it is better to create a single attribute “reachedLevel” and use the value as the level.
Capturing this data as a single attribute improves the performance of both your app and the mParticle dashboard by reducing the number of unique data points you need to manage. It’s also a much more useful data point. For example, you can easily create a single audience builder condition to target users within a range of levels reached.
An mParticle workspace can combine data from multiple platforms, for example it can show data from the same app running in iOS and Android. For this reason, you may wish to choose attribute names that you can keep consistent across all platforms for easier management. For example, if you call an attribute levelReached
in iOS, LevelReached
on Android, and level_reached
on web, mParticle will treat these as three separate attributes.
Several partner integrations expect custom keys and values associated with each user or device, known as integration attributes. These are similar to “custom flags” except rather than being specific to an event, they’re specific to a user or device. The most common example of this are partner-specific user or device IDs.
The Android SDK will persist any integration attributes at the device-level (rather than user-level), and will include them with every event upload. You can set an integration attribute by specifying an integration ID as well as a key and value:
//update the partner ID and attribute key as necessary for your integration
int adobePartnerId = 11;
String adobeIntegrationAttributeKey = "vid";
Map<String, String> integrationAttributes = new HashMap<String, String>();
integrationAttributes.put(adobeIntegrationAttributeKey, "<Adobe Visitor ID>");
MParticle.getInstance().setIntegrationAttributes(11, integrationAttributes);
val adobePartnerId = 11
val adobeIntegrationAttributeKey = "vid"
val integrationAttributes: MutableMap<String, String> = HashMap()
integrationAttributes[adobeIntegrationAttributeKey] = "<Adobe Visitor ID>"
MParticle.getInstance().setIntegrationAttributes(11, integrationAttributes)
Was this page helpful?