I've been spending some of my free time working on something silly. People who know me expect me to bring up the OMGWTF2 contest now. That's a valid point, so let me start over.
I've been spending some of my free time working on two silly somethings. Here's a link to one of those: http://demo.tabeoka.be/Contact%20%20Tabeoka.htm . Click that link and fill out the form and send it up.
I've been spending some of my free time working on two silly somethings. Here's a link to one of those: http://demo.tabeoka.be/Contact%20%20Tabeoka.htm . Click that link and fill out the form and send it up.
Go ahead, nothing bad will happen. I'll wait right here.
Did you click that link? No? You need to have clicked that link to make sense of the rest of this post. No really! Go back and click.
Right. So now that that is done, I have a second link for you: click right here.
Now there are three possibilities:
1) you're pretty gullible, and thought that was amazing,
2) you thought that was still pretty neat, or
3) that link did nothing because you're using some browser I haven't tested, which are many.
For those of you who chose option 3 and missed all the excitement: that second link should have replayed exactly what you did on that page the first time you were there. I had the idea after going through some Google Analytics graphs and wondering: "But why do they click that particular link?". You could potentially use this type of script to do usability testing on the cheap.
The code is for the most part pretty straightforward, but there are a few things which I thought were interesting to point out:
It generates unique selectors for elements. If you click something, it needs to log which element. When you're just dealing with javascript, you would keep a reference to the DOM element, but we're logging to json. Generating a jquery selector enables getting an easy reference to the clicked element. For now I'm generating a selector by going through parent elements ( td>tr ) and logging the index (:nth-child) until I hit an element with an id (#content) or the document root (html>body>). Amazingly I had to write this myself; I couldn't find a pre-written script on Google.
In the interest of keeping bandwidth use and file size down, I log frame-by-frame. Every 40 ms (for a frame rate of 25) the data collector comes by, compiles and documentEvents object and adds it to the array. which brings me to the next point: this script is completely modular. Currently it logs input fields, mouse location, scroll position and clicks. If you want to add another thing to log though, say actions in a Flash object, you just write another set of methods to log and replay those, and point the main logger file to it. Remember that every additional logger adds extra bytes to the data that needs to be sent to the server.
Everybody knows that the onunload (or onbeforeunload) can not be trusted. That's why I ping the latest frames to the server every second. You could set it to 2 seconds or 10 seconds or whatever as well. At the server end I have a .NET handler that appends the extra json to the end of a file. The first request generates a new file and sends back the id for subsequent requests (currently a Guid). This would be trivial to implement in another server language.
Current problems include:
In Chrome onchange on an input field is only fired after the field loses focus. IE fires it on keypress. That means that in IE you see the text field value being typed up, but in Chrome it just appears fully written. Chrome is better for bandwidth, but IE is nicer to see replayed. I haven't made up my mind yet which is preferable.
Replaying the logged event mutates the initial page state, but moving back the timeline does not revert to previous page state. I could clear text fields and such, but simulated clicks that fired event handlers might be impossible to undo. Like that cookie notice.
Lastly, this is just some demo script code, don't use it for anything serious. I haven't figured out yet if I'm going to actually release this code as open source at e.g. GitHub. Don't copy/paste and run with it. I'm sure it's illegal or something.
1) you're pretty gullible, and thought that was amazing,
2) you thought that was still pretty neat, or
3) that link did nothing because you're using some browser I haven't tested, which are many.
For those of you who chose option 3 and missed all the excitement: that second link should have replayed exactly what you did on that page the first time you were there. I had the idea after going through some Google Analytics graphs and wondering: "But why do they click that particular link?". You could potentially use this type of script to do usability testing on the cheap.
The code is for the most part pretty straightforward, but there are a few things which I thought were interesting to point out:
It generates unique selectors for elements. If you click something, it needs to log which element. When you're just dealing with javascript, you would keep a reference to the DOM element, but we're logging to json. Generating a jquery selector enables getting an easy reference to the clicked element. For now I'm generating a selector by going through parent elements ( td>tr ) and logging the index (:nth-child) until I hit an element with an id (#content) or the document root (html>body>). Amazingly I had to write this myself; I couldn't find a pre-written script on Google.
In the interest of keeping bandwidth use and file size down, I log frame-by-frame. Every 40 ms (for a frame rate of 25) the data collector comes by, compiles and documentEvents object and adds it to the array. which brings me to the next point: this script is completely modular. Currently it logs input fields, mouse location, scroll position and clicks. If you want to add another thing to log though, say actions in a Flash object, you just write another set of methods to log and replay those, and point the main logger file to it. Remember that every additional logger adds extra bytes to the data that needs to be sent to the server.
Everybody knows that the onunload (or onbeforeunload) can not be trusted. That's why I ping the latest frames to the server every second. You could set it to 2 seconds or 10 seconds or whatever as well. At the server end I have a .NET handler that appends the extra json to the end of a file. The first request generates a new file and sends back the id for subsequent requests (currently a Guid). This would be trivial to implement in another server language.
Current problems include:
In Chrome onchange on an input field is only fired after the field loses focus. IE fires it on keypress. That means that in IE you see the text field value being typed up, but in Chrome it just appears fully written. Chrome is better for bandwidth, but IE is nicer to see replayed. I haven't made up my mind yet which is preferable.
Replaying the logged event mutates the initial page state, but moving back the timeline does not revert to previous page state. I could clear text fields and such, but simulated clicks that fired event handlers might be impossible to undo. Like that cookie notice.
Lastly, this is just some demo script code, don't use it for anything serious. I haven't figured out yet if I'm going to actually release this code as open source at e.g. GitHub. Don't copy/paste and run with it. I'm sure it's illegal or something.
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