The Tamber PHP SDK
This is an UNOFFICIAL SDK.
The first thing to do is head to the official Tamber website to register
When this package is finally on packagist, you'll be able to install it using
composer require kregel/tamber
<?php
require 'vendor/autoload.php';
use Kregel\Tamber\Tamber;
use Kregel\Tamber\Event;
Tamber::setProjectKey('...');
Tamber::setEngineKey('...'); // If you just created your account you won't be able to set or create an engine until you track at least 1 event.
try {
$response = (new Event)->track([
/**
* This will be created if it doesn't exist by default (via Tamber's code not this package)
*/
'user' => 'your user id using whatever format you want',
/**
* This can be anything from likes, dislikes, purchases, clicks, reads, ect.
* This will be created if it doesn't exist by default (via Tamber's code not this package)
*/
'behavior' => 'like',
/**
* If I were using Laravel I might do something like `App\User:1` or `App\Models\Transaction:810`. Something to signify the thing performing
* that's performing said beahvior and the identifier to track that thing's previous behaviors.
*/
'item' => 'spotify:track:1JIgaRnqtzS7DuGM3hVZU9',
/**
* The Tamber docs mention the context could be related to A/B testing for interface changes.
* but it could also be used to track the user's current url, previous things the user clicked on or other actions that the user preformed
* like whether or not they played the song or read the book.
*/
'context' => [
'home-page',
],
/**
* This is just to indicate whether or not this specific behavior was related to a recommened/suggested action.
* i.e. Did they play the song because it was in your recommended list?
*/
'hit' => false,
]);
print_r($response->getContents());
} catch (\Kregel\Tamber\Exceptions\TamberException $e) {
echo $e->getMessage() . "\n";
print_r($e->getContext());
}
<?php
use Kregel\Tamber\Tamber;
use Kregel\Tamber\Behavior;
Tamber::setProjectKey($projectToken);
try {
$behavior = (new Behavior)->create([
'name' => 'purchase',
'desirability' => 0.6
]);
} catch (\Kregel\Tamber\Exceptions\TamberException $e) {
echo $e->getMessage() . "\n";
print_r($e->getContext());
}
Creating
<?php
use Kregel\Tamber\Tamber;
use Kregel\Tamber\Item;
Tamber::setProjectKey($projectToken);
try {
$item = (new Item)->create([
'id' => 'App\Song:1', // This just needs to be some kind of unique identifier.
'properties' => [
'artist' => 'Logic',
'title' => 'Under Pressure',
'length' => '9:20',
'explicit' => true
],
'tags' => [
'rap', 'hip-hop'
],
'created' => App\Song::find(1)->created_at // This is just to represent when the song was created in your system.
]);
} catch (\Kregel\Tamber\Exceptions\TamberException $e) {
echo $e->getMessage() . "\n";
print_r($e->getContext());
}
Getting an item
<?php
use Kregel\Tamber\Tamber;
use Kregel\Tamber\Item;
Tamber::setProjectKey($projectToken);
$item = (new Item)->retrieve([
'id' => 'spotify:track:5LME7YULt0enp6UAB8VoDn'
]);
It should be noted that each item in the Tamber API uses the TransformRequest
trait. That means we hijack the
calls to the SDK and transform them into something a bit more usable.
Using the behavior creation example above. You can access any of the response data by simply trying to access it from the behavior variable.
$behavior->result->name // purchase
$behavior->status // 200
$behavior->success // true
// ect...