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Pyramid addon for opinionated integration with Mixpanel, an analytics platform and CRM.

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Integrate your Pyramid app with Mixpanel to learn who your users are and how they are using your app.

CircleCI for pyramid_mixpanel (master branch) Test coverage (master branch) Test coverage (master branch) latest version of pyramid_mixpanel on PyPI Supported Python versions License: MIT Built by these great folks! Talk to us in #pyramid on Freenode IRC

Opinionated Mixpanel (and Customer.io) integration

The reason this package exists is to provide sane defaults when integrating with Mixpanel. Instead of chasing down event name typos and debugging why tracking does not work, you can focus on learning what is important to your users.

  • You never have typo-duplicated events in Mixpanel, because every event name comes from a dataclass, never from a string that can be miss-typed by mistake.
  • Same for properties. Like events, properties are hardcoded as dataclasses.
  • All "special" and "reserved" events and properties are already provided, no need to chase them down in various Mixpanel docs.
  • Your app never stops working if Mixpanel is down, but you still get errors in your logs so you know what is going on.
  • You never forget to call flush() on the events buffer, since pyramid_mixpanel hooks into the request life-cycle and calls flush() at the end of the request processing.
  • You defer sending events until the entire request is processed successfully, i.e. never send events like "User added a thing" if adding the thing to DB failed at a later stage in the request life-cycle.

NOTE: At the end of 2021, Mixpanel is sunsetting their Email Messages feature. Since we rely heavily on those at Niteo, we are adding Customer.io integration into this library, to replace Mixpanel's Email Messages. If you don't want to use Customer.io, nothing changes for you, just keep using pyramid_mixpanel as always. If you do want to use Customer.io, then install this package as pyramid_mixpanel[customerio] and add the following registry settings. Then all profile_set and track calls will get automatically replicated to Customer.io. Other calls such as profile_append will only send to Mixpanel.

customerio.tracking.site_id: <secret>
customerio.tracking.api_key: <secret>
customerio.tracking.region: <eu OR us>

If you want to skip sending some track or profile_set calls to Customer.io, add the skip_customerio=True as a function parameter.

Features

  • Builds on top of https://mixpanel.github.io/mixpanel-python/.
  • Provides a handy request.mixpanel.* helper for sending events and setting profile properties.
  • Makes sure to call .flush() at the end of request life-cycle.
  • Provides dataclasses for events and properties, to avoid typos.
  • You can roll your own Consumer, for example one that schedules a background task to send events, to increase request processing speed, since HTTP requests to Mixpanel are offloaded to a background task.
  • Provides a MixpanelQuery helper to use JQL to query Mixpanel for data. Some common queries like one for getting profiles by email are included.
  • In local development and unit testing, all messages are stored as plain dicts in request.mixpanel.mocked_messages. This makes writing integration tests a breeze. By default, these dicts omit "library" properties such as token, time, mp_lib and similar, to make tests less verbose. If you need them, set MockedConsumer.DROP_SYSTEM_MESSAGE_PROPERTIES to True.
  • Automatically sets Mixpanel tracking distinct_id if request.user exists. Otherwise, you need to set it manually with request.mixpanel.distinct_id = 'foo'.

Getting started

  1. Declare pyramid_mixpanel as a dependency in your Pyramid project.

  2. Include the following lines:

    config.include("pyramid_mixpanel")
  3. Tell mixpanel_mixpanel how you want to use it:

    # for local development and unit testing
    # events will be stored in request.mixpanel.mocked_messages
    mixpanel.token = false
    
    # minimal configuration
    mixpanel.token = <TOKEN>
    
    # enable support for querying Mixpanel data
    mixpanel.api_secret = <SECRET>
    
    # custom events and properties
    mixpanel.events = myapp.mixpanel.Events
    mixpanel.event_properties = myapp.mixpanel.EventProperties
    mixpanel.profile_properties = myapp.mixpanel.ProfileProperties
    
    # defer sending of Mixpanel messages to a background task queue
    mixpanel.consumer = myapp.mixpanel.QueuedConsumer
    
    # enable logging with structlog
    pyramid_heroku.structlog = true

For view code dealing with requests, a pre-configured request.mixpanel is available.

Design defense

The authors of pyramid_openapi3 believe that while Mixpanel allows sending schema-less data, that can change as requirements for the project change, it is better to be precise about what "events" you send and what the properties of those events will be called. Same for "profiles". Here are the reasons that accumulated over 5 years of using Mixpanel at Niteo:

a) There will be typos in event and property names. They will clutter your Mixpanel dashboard and slow you down.

b) There will be differently named events for similar actions sent from different parts of your codebase. Then in your Mixpanel dashboard you'll have User Clicked Button and Button Clicked events in you won't be sure which to use, and what's the difference between them.

c) Your events and properties will not be consistently named, because they will be sent from different parts of your codebase, by different authors. Your Mixpanel dashboard will feel somewhat "broken" because some events will be in past tense (User Logged In), some in all lowers caps (generated invoice), some with only the action verb (click) and so on.

All issues outlined above are alleviated using this package because all event & property names are defined as dataclasses, in a single source of truth manner. No typos are possible once the initial specification is done. You immediately recognize bad naming patterns because all event & property names are in a single file.

Naming best practice

In order to have nice and consistent event and property names, the authors of this package suggest using the following guidelines when coming up with names:

  • Use the <item> <action> format in past tense, i.e. Button Clicked, Page Viewed, File Downloaded.
  • Use Title Case.
  • Frontend only sends two Mixpanel events: Button/Link Clicked and Page Viewed. We then construct custom events such as Password Reset Button Clicked or Pricing Page Viewed inside Mixpanel dashboard based on button name, URL, etc. Custom events can be modified retroactively, regular events cannot.
  • Backend sends "action" events, when those actions finish successfully, such as Site Deployed, PDF generated, Backup Completed.
  • More on https://segment.com/academy/collecting-data/naming-conventions-for-clean-data/.

Running tests

You need to have pipenv and Python 3.7 installed on your machine. Then you can run:

$ make tests

Related packages

These packages are in the same problem-space:

Use in the wild

A couple of projects that use pyramid_mixpanel in production: