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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
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Aliasing
We started this tutorial by creating an input using the Higgs Shop sample app, setting up a webhook output, and creating a connection between the two. We then learned how to collect data about specific events.
If the Higgs Shop were a real app, these events would be triggered by users. Building an understanding of who these users are and how they’re interacting with the app is the final piece of our data puzzle.
We track users with IDSync, mParticle’s identity resolution and management tool. IDSync provides three main benefits:
IDSync accepts requests from the iOS SDK to identify the current user of your app. These requests include any available identifiers (either from cookies or the browser’s local storage) that are used to search for a matching user profile in mParticle. If there is a match, then the found profile is attributed with the data collected during the current session. If a match isn’t found, the user remains anonymous and any future events they trigger are attributed to an anonymous profile.
There are several components and concepts involved in identity resolution:
All users are considered to be either known or anonymous. A known user has an existing profile containing a login ID. For example, a user who has already created an account using a login ID is considered known.
An anonymous user does not have a profile with a login ID. In other words, a user could have previously used your app, generating data attributed with a profile, but if they didn’t created an account using a login ID they are considered anonymous.
The process of identifying users (a process often referred to as “identity resolution”) involves three steps:
An identify call is made, passing in any available identifiers. These might be identifiers like a device ID stored within the browser’s local storage or a cookie, or they could be a login ID like an email address or username that the user entered into a login form..
IDSync looks for a matching user profile using the identifiers included with the identification request in order of preference as defined by your identity priority. For example, an email address will return a matching user profile with a higher degree of confidence than a device ID, so email address is usually listed higher in your identity priority.
If a match is found, IDsync returns the corresponding mParticle ID (MPID), the user becomes known, and all previous and following events are associated with this MPID. If a match wasn’t found, the SDK continues to use the original MPID generated for the current user, as per the default identity strategy.
If IDSync cannot find a matching user profile, the resulting behavior is determined by your identity strategy.
Now that we’re familiar with the concepts of identity resolution, let’s learn how to use the iOS SDK to identify and track users in the Higgs Shop sample app.
IDsync provides four methods for tracking and managing users:
identify
: Called automatically when the SDK is initialized.login
: Used when a user logs into an account.logout
: Used when a user logs out of an account.modify
: Used when you need to add or change the identities associated with a profile, such as when a user updates their email address or phone number.The iOS SDK automatically calls the IDSync API on initialization to identify the current user without any manual configuration. This is done automatically so the SDK is able to find an mParticle ID (MPID) to associate collected data with. If an MPID cannot be found, then IDSync will create a new MPID to associate collected data with.
You can manually identify a user at any time by submitting an identification request to the IDSync API using the method MPIdentityApiRequest
. Manually identifying users can result in unncessary calls to the IDSync API, so this is not recommended.
If the user is already logged in or you already have some identifiers for the current user, create an identity request with MPIdentityApiRequest.withCurrentUser()
. You can use helper methods like identityRequest.email
and identityRequest.customerID
to set or modify common identifiers.
var identityRequest = MPIdentityApiRequest.withCurrentUser()
// The MPIdentityApiRequest provides convenience methods for common identifiers like email and customerIDs
identityRequest.email = "foo@example.com"
identityRequest.customerId = "123456"
// Alternatively, you can use the setIdentity method and supply the MPIdentity type manually
identityRequest.setIdentity("bar-id", identityType: MPIdentity.other)
identityRequest.setIdentity(ASIdentifierManager.shared().advertisingIdentifier.uuidString, identityType: MPIdentity.iOSAdvertiserId)
If you don’t provide any identities in an identityRequest
object, then the SDK uses the identity of the most recent user stored in local cache.
You can create an identity request with an empty user with MPIdentityApiRequest.withEmptyUser()
, which won’t contain any identifiers associated with the current user.
The Higgs Shop sample app is not configured to handle failed IDSync requests, but the iOS SDK does provide error handling functionality if you wish to implement it. Learn more in Error Handling.
You can configure your app to call the login
method whenever a user performs the corresponding action in your app. The login
method accepts an identity request as shown above, in addition to an optional callback function.
Following is a generic example of the use of the login
method:
MParticle.sharedInstance().identity.login(identityRequest, completion: identityCallback)
In the Higgs Shop, login behavior is defined in the file MyAccountViewController.swift
:
@objc private func signIn() {
myAccountValueTextbox.textBoxField.resignFirstResponder()
toggleVisibility(isSignedIn: true)
let loginRequest = MPIdentityApiRequest.withEmptyUser()
loginRequest.email = myAccountValueTextbox.textBoxField.text
MParticle.sharedInstance().identity.login(loginRequest) { result, error in
print("Login request complete - result=\(String(describing: result)) error=\(String(describing: error))")
}
}
The logout
method is very similar to login
. You can include any anonymous identifiers you want to associate with the logged-out state of the user. The more common approach is to omit the IdentityApiRequest
which results in the logged-out user remaining entirely anonymous, with no associated identifiers.
MParticle.getInstance().Identity().logout()
// exluding the identity request from any IDSync API is the same as invoking the following:
MParticle.getInstance().Identity().logout(IdentityApiRequest.withEmptyUser().build())
In the Higgs Shop, log out behavior is handled in the same file as the login behavior, MyAccountViewController.swift
:
MParticle.sharedInstance().identity.logout(completion: identityCallback)
// exluding the identity request from any IDSync API is the same as invoking the following:
MParticle.sharedInstance().identity.logout(MPIdentityApiRequest.withEmptyUser(), completion: identityCallback)
To modify a user’s profile, the same MPIdentityApiRequest
method is called.
When you make a modify request, the iOS SDK assigns the current user’s MPID to the request if you don’t supply a user when creating the request object.
In the following example, the SDK would either update the existing email address associated with the user or add the email address if one didn’t already exist.
var identityRequest = MPIdentityApiRequest.withEmptyUser()
identityRequest.email = nil;
MParticle.sharedInstance().identity.modify(identityRequest, completion: identityCallback)
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