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@userpilot/react-native

v1.0.8

Published

Userpilot React Native Module for Android and iOS mobile apps

Readme

Userpilot React Native Module

npm License: MIT

Userpilot React Native Module enables you to capture user insights and deliver personalized in-app experiences in real time. With just a one-time setup, you can immediately begin leveraging Userpilot’s analytics and engagement features to understand user behaviors and guide their journeys in-app.

This document provides a step-by-step walkthrough of the installation and initialization process, as well as instructions on using the SDK’s public APIs.

🚀 Getting Started

Prerequisites

React Native - your application should use React Native version 0.73 or above. Applications using Expo should use version 50 or above. The New Architecture is fully supported.

Android - your application's build.gradle must have a compileSdk of 35+ and minSdk of 21+. and use Android Gradle Plugin (AGP) 8.6+ (8.8.2+ recommended).

android {
   compileSdk 35

    defaultConfig {
        minSdk 21
    }
}

For AGP versions < 8.8.2 (React Native versions < 0.79), you may need to add the following line to your gradle.properties:

android.experimental.lint.version = 8.8.2

iOS - your application must target iOS 11+ to install the SDK, and iOS 13+ to render Userpilot content. Update the iOS project xcodeproj to set the deployment target, if needed. In the application's Podfile, include at least this minimum version.

# Podfile
platform :ios, '13.0'

Installation

Add the Userpilot React Native Module dependency to your application.

  1. In your app's root directory, install the Userpilot React Native Module
    npm install @userpilot/react-native
  2. Under your application's ios folder, run
    pod install

Note: You do not need to manually update your Podfile to add Userpilot.

Initializing

To use Userpilot, initialize it once in your Application class. This ensures the SDK is ready as soon as your app starts. Update your Application class. Replace <APP_TOKEN> with your Application Token, which can be fetched from your Environments Page.

import * as Userpilot from '@userpilot/react-native'

await Userpilot.setup(<APP_TOKEN>, { logging: true })
SDK Configurations

| Parameter | Type | Description | | ----------------------------------------- | -------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | | logging | Boolean | Enable or Disable logs for SDKDefault: false | | disableRequestPushNotificationsPermission | Boolean | Disable request push notifications permission by SDK.Default: false | | useInAppBrowser | Boolean | configuration to indicate when to open the URL inside CustomTabsIntent or not.Default: false |

Identifying Users

This API is used to identify unique users and companies (groups of users) and set their properties. Once identified, all subsequent tracked events and screens will be attributed to that user.

Recommended Usage:

  • On user authentication (login): Immediately call identify when a user signs in to establish their identity for all future events.
  • On app launch for authenticated users: If the user has a valid authenticated session, call identify at app launch.
  • Upon property updates: Whenever user or company properties change.
    API:
// Identify a user
identify(userID: string, properties?: object, company?: object)
    Example:
userpilot.identify(
  '<USER_ID>',
  {'name' : 'John Doe', 'email' : '[email protected]', 'created_at' : '2019-10-17', 'role' : 'Admin'},
  {'id' : '<COMPANY_ID>', 'name' : 'Acme Labs', 'created_at' : '2019-10-17', 'plan' : 'Free'}
)

Properties Guidelines

  • Key id is required in company properties, to identify a unique company.
  • Userpilot supports String, Numeric, and Date types.
  • Make sure you’re sending date values in ISO8601 format.
  • If you are planning to use Userpilot’s localization features, make sure you are passing user property locale_code with a value that adheres to ISO 639-1 format.
  • Userpilot’s reserved properties’ have pre-determined types and improve profiles interface in the dashboard:
    • Use key email to pass the user’s email.
    • Use key name to pass the user’s or company’s name.
    • Use key created_at to pass the user’s or company’s signed up date.

Notes

  • Make sure your User ID source is consistent across all of your platform installations (Web, Android, and iOS).
  • While properties are optional, they are essential in Userpilot’s segmentation capabilities. We encourage you to set the properties with the people who are responsible for Userpilot integration.

Tracking Screens (Required)

Calling screen is crucial for unlocking Userpilot’s core engagement and analytics capabilities. When a user navigates to a particular screen, invoking screen records that view and triggers any eligible in-app experiences. Subsequent events are also attributed to the most recently tracked screen, providing context for richer analytical insights. For these reasons, we strongly recommend tracking all of your app’s screen views.

    API:
screen(title: string)
    Example:
userpilot.screen('Profile')

Tracking Events

Log any meaningful action the user performs. Events can be button clicks, form submissions, or any custom activity you want to analyze. Optionally, you can pass metadata with the event to provide specific context.

    API:
track(name: string, properties?: object)
    Example:
userpilot.track('Added to Cart', { itemId: 'sku_456', price: 29.99 })

Logging Out

When a user logs out, call logout() to clear the current user context. This ensures subsequent events are no longer associated with the previous user.

    API:
logout()
    Example:
userpilot.logout()

Anonymous Users

If a user is not authenticated, call anonymous() to track events without a user ID. This is useful for pre-signup flows or guest user sessions.

    API:
anonymous()
    Example:
userpilot.anonymous()

Notes

  • Anonymous users are counted towards your Monthly Active Users usage. You should take your account’s MAU limit into consideration before applying this API.

Trigger Experience

Triggers a specific experience programmatically using it's ID. This API allows you to manually initiate an experience within your application.

userpilot.triggerExperience('EXPERIENCE_ID')

To end current active experience

userpilot.endExperience()

SDK callbacks

Userpilot SDK provides three types of callbacks:

  • Navigation Listener
  • Analytics Listener
  • Experience Listener

Navigation Listener is called when a deep link is triggered from an experience or notification. It holds the custom deep link URL to be handled by the client app.

Params:

url: string

Analytics Listener is called when an event is triggered by the client app.

Params:

analytic: string
value: string
properties: Map<string, any>

Analytics Listener Called when an analytics event is triggered by the Userpilot SDK. Use this to mirror or log SDK-level events into your analytics system.

Params:

analytic: "Identify" | "Screen" | "Event"

value: String — Event value, if any.

properties: Map<String, Any> — Additional metadata for the event.

Experience Listener Called when an experience or its step changes state. Includes two callback types:

onExperienceStateChanged Triggered when the overall state of an experience changes.

experienceId?: Int — Unique ID of the experience (optional)

experienceType: "Flow" | "Survey" | "NPS"

experienceState: "Started" | "Completed" | "Dismissed" | "Skipped" | "Submitted"

onExperienceStepStateChanged Triggered when the state of a specific step within an experience changes.

stepId: Int — Unique identifier of the step

experienceId: Int — ID of the parent experience

experienceType: "Flow" | "Survey" | "NPS"

stepState: "Started" | "Completed" | "Dismissed" | "Skipped" | "Submitted"

step?: Int — Step index (optional)

totalSteps?: Int — Total number of steps in the experience (optional)

Both callbacks are sent under the same event name: UserpilotExperienceEvent

useEffect(() => {
  const eventEmitter = new NativeEventEmitter(
    NativeModules.UserpilotReactNative
  )
  const listeners = [
    eventEmitter.addListener('UserpilotAnalyticsEvent', (event) =>
      console.log('Analytics Event:', JSON.stringify(event, null, 2))
    ),
    eventEmitter.addListener('UserpilotExperienceEvent', (event) =>
      console.log('Experience Event:', JSON.stringify(event, null, 2))
    ),
    eventEmitter.addListener('UserpilotNavigationEvent', (event) => {
      console.log('Navigation Event', JSON.stringify(event, null, 2))
      if (event?.url) handleDeepLink(event.url)
    }),
  ]
  return () => listeners.forEach((listener) => listener.remove())
}, [])

Push Notification

Userpilot SDK supports handling push notifications to help you deliver targeted messages and enhance user engagement. For setup instructions, and integration details, please refer to the Push Notification Guide.

📝 Documentation

Full documentation is available at Userpilot

🎬 Examples

The example directory in this repository contains full example iOS/Android app to providing references for correct installation and usage of the Userpilot API.

📄 License

This project is licensed under the MIT License. See LICENSE for more information.