Re: drupal php google analytics [message #171006 is a reply to message #171005] |
Tue, 14 December 2010 21:30 |
Magno
Messages: 49 Registered: October 2010
Karma:
|
Member |
|
|
On 12/14/2010 06:08 PM, Jerry Stuckle wrote:
> On 12/14/2010 2:25 PM, canajien wrote:
>> It has been a very long time since I have had to do any php
>> programming, so please bear with me as I haven't been able to find an
>> answer to this problem after several searches.
>>
>> There is a line of code in a drupal template that generates a link to
>> download a file:
>>
>> <?php print $node->field_report_file[0]['view'] ?>
>>
>> this will generate something like this
>>
>> <a href="filename.pdf">filename</a>
>>
>>
>> We are using google analytics with the website and we would like to
>> track how many times people download a file as well, normally to track
>> a link you would write the code to look like this:
>>
>> <a href="filename.pdf"
>> onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('filename.pdf");">filename</a>
>>
>> my problem is modifyng the drupal code to include the onclick, I have
>> tried
>>
>> <?php print $node->field_report_file[0]['view'] print onclick=
>> \"pageTracker._trackPageview('$node->field_report_file[0]['view']\");?
>>>
>>
>>
>> and several variations, but I know there is something wrong with my
>> syntax and I can't simply insert print onclick=
>> \"pageTracker._trackPageview('$node->field_report_file[0]['view']\");
>> into the original command
>>
>> can someone point me in the write direction?
>>
>> thanks
>
> Try the Drupal site - they have a lot of people who are quite
> knowledgeable about drupal and can help you.
>
> TNP's suggestion is mediocre, at best. It fails if, for instance, people
> have javascript turned off - which includes robots which spider your site.
>
I have always wondered why the troll keeps this much hatred against TNP.
And everytime he can, he calls him mediocre, clueless, and such things.
Anyone here knows?
|
|
|