A/B testing enables you to test the impact of product changes and understand how they affect your users' behaviour. For example:
- How changes to your onboarding flow affect your signup rate.
- If different designs of your app's dashboard increase user engagement and retention.
- The impact a free trial period versus money-back guarantee to determine which results in more customers.
A/B tests are also referred to as "experiments", and this is how we refer to them in the PostHog app.
To start using A/B tests, install PostHog with the library you want to run tests in (if you haven't already):
Option 1: Add the JavaScript snippet to your HTML Recommended
This is the simplest way to get PostHog up and running. It only takes a few minutes.
Copy the snippet below and replace <ph_project_api_key>
and <ph_client_api_host>
with your project's values, then add it within the <head>
tags at the base of your product - ideally just before the closing </head>
tag. This ensures PostHog loads on any page users visit.
You can find the snippet pre-filled with this data in your project settings.
<script>!function(t,e){var o,n,p,r;e.__SV||(window.posthog=e,e._i=[],e.init=function(i,s,a){function g(t,e){var o=e.split(".");2==o.length&&(t=t[o[0]],e=o[1]),t[e]=function(){t.push([e].concat(Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments,0)))}}(p=t.createElement("script")).type="text/javascript",p.async=!0,p.src=s.api_host+"/static/array.js",(r=t.getElementsByTagName("script")[0]).parentNode.insertBefore(p,r);var u=e;for(void 0!==a?u=e[a]=[]:a="posthog",u.people=u.people||[],u.toString=function(t){var e="posthog";return"posthog"!==a&&(e+="."+a),t||(e+=" (stub)"),e},u.people.toString=function(){return u.toString(1)+".people (stub)"},o="capture identify alias people.set people.set_once set_config register register_once unregister opt_out_capturing has_opted_out_capturing opt_in_capturing reset isFeatureEnabled onFeatureFlags getFeatureFlag getFeatureFlagPayload reloadFeatureFlags group updateEarlyAccessFeatureEnrollment getEarlyAccessFeatures getActiveMatchingSurveys getSurveys getNextSurveyStep onSessionId".split(" "),n=0;n<o.length;n++)g(u,o[n]);e._i.push([i,s,a])},e.__SV=1)}(document,window.posthog||[]);posthog.init('<ph_project_api_key>', {api_host: 'https://us.i.posthog.com', person_profiles: 'identified_only'})</script>
Once the snippet is added, PostHog automatically captures $pageview
and other events like button clicks. You can then enable other products, such as session replays, within your project settings.
Option 2: Install via package manager
yarn add posthog-js
And then include it in your files:
import posthog from 'posthog-js'posthog.init('<ph_project_api_key>', { api_host: 'https://us.i.posthog.com', person_profiles: 'identified_only' })
If you don't want to send test data while you're developing, you can do the following:
if (!window.location.host.includes('127.0.0.1') && !window.location.host.includes('localhost')) {posthog.init('<ph_project_api_key>', { api_host: 'https://us.i.posthog.com', person_profiles: 'identified_only' })}
If you're using React or Next.js, checkout our React SDK or Next.js integration.
Advanced option - bundle all required extensions
By default, the PostHog JS library will only load the core functionality, lazy-loading extensions such as Surveys or the Session Replay 'recorder' when needed. This can cause issues if you have a Content Security Policy (CSP) that blocks inline scripts or if you want to optimize your bundle at build time to ensure all dependencies are ready immediately. In addition environments like the Chrome Extension store will reject code that loads remote code. To solve this issue we have multiple import options available.
Please note - with any of the
no-external
options, the Toolbar will be unavailable as this is only possible as a runtime dependency loaded directly fromus.posthog.com
// No external code loading possible (this disables all extensions such as Replay, Surveys, Exceptions etc.)import posthog from 'posthog-js/dist/module.no-external'// No external code loading possible but all external dependencies pre-bundledimport posthog from 'posthog-js/dist/module.full.no-external'// All external dependencies pre-bundled and with the ability to load external scripts (primarily useful is you use Site Apps)import posthog from 'posthog-js/dist/module.full'// Finally you can also import specific extra dependenciesimport "posthog-js/dist/recorder"import "posthog-js/dist/surveys"import "posthog-js/dist/exception-autocapture"import "posthog-js/dist/tracing-headers"import "posthog-js/dist/web-vitals"import posthog from 'posthog-js/dist/module.no-external'// All other posthog commands are the same as usualposthog.init('<ph_project_api_key>', { api_host: 'https://us.i.posthog.com', person_profiles: 'identified_only' })
NOTE: You should ensure if using this option that you always import
posthog-js
from the same module, otherwise multiple bundles could get included. At this timeposthog-js/react
does not work with any module import other than the default.