Source code: statsig-io/cpp-client-sdk
Set Up the SDK
1
Install the SDK
- Downloaded From GitHub
- FetchContent
2
Initialize the SDK
Next, initialize the SDK with a client SDK key from the “API Keys” tab on the Statsig console. These keys are safe to embed in a client application.Along with the key, pass in a User Object with the attributes you’d like to target later on in a gate or experiment.Synchronous initialization will leverage cache (if available), returning immediately.
Data for subsequent sessions will then be fetched in the background.Asynchronous initialization, on the other hand provides a callback, allowing you to wait for the most
current data to be fetched.For convenience, there is also a singleton instance that can be accessed via Optional - Configuration via StatsigOptionsIt is possible to adjust certain aspects of how the SDK works via a StatsigOptions struct.
Just pass in a StatsigOptions struct during initialization.
StatsigClient::Shared()
.Use the SDK
Checking a Feature Flag/Gate
Now that your SDK is initialized, let’s check a Feature Gate. Feature Gates can be used to create logic branches in code that can be rolled out to different users from the Statsig Console. Gates are always CLOSED or OFF (thinkreturn false;
) by default.
Reading a Dynamic Config
Feature Gates can be very useful for simple on/off switches, with optional but advanced user targeting. However, if you want to be able send a different set of values (strings, numbers, and etc.) to your clients based on specific user attributes, e.g. country, Dynamic Configs can help you with that. The API is very similar to Feature Gates, but you get an entire json object you can configure on the server and you can fetch typed parameters from it. For example:DynamicConfig.GetValue returns JsonObj which is an unordered map of string to
nlohmann/json
. See https://github.com/nlohmann/jsonGetting a Layer/Experiment
Then we have Layers/Experiments, which you can use to run A/B/n experiments. We offer two APIs, but we recommend the use of layers to enable quicker iterations with parameter reuse.Layer.GetValue and Experiment.GetValue return JsonObj which are unordered maps of string to
nlohmann/json
. See https://github.com/nlohmann/jsonLogging an Event
Now that you have a Feature Gate or an Experiment set up, you may want to track some custom events and see how your new features or different experiment groups affect these events. This is super easy with Statsig - simply call the Log Event API for the event, and you can additionally provide some value and/or an object of metadata to be logged together with the event:Statsig User
You need to provide a StatsigUser object to check/get your configurations. You should pass as much information as possible in order to take advantage of advanced gate and config conditions. Most of the time, theuserID
field is needed in order to provide a consistent experience for a given
user (see logged-out experiments to understand how to correctly run experiments for logged-out
users).
Besides userID
, we also have email
, ip
, userAgent
, country
, locale
and appVersion
as top-level fields on
StatsigUser. In addition, you can pass any key-value pairs in an object/dictionary to the custom
field and be able to
create targeting based on them.
Once the user logs in or has an update/changed, make sure to call updateUser
with the updated userID
and/or any other updated user attributes:
Private Attributes
Have sensitive user PII data that should not be logged? No problem, we have a solution for it! On the StatsigUser object we also have a field calledprivateAttributes
, which is a simple object/dictionary that you can use to set private user attributes. Any attribute set in privateAttributes
will only be used for evaluation/targeting, and removed from any logs before they are sent to Statsig server.
For example, if you have feature gates that should only pass for users with emails ending in “@statsig.com”, but do not want to log your users’ email addresses to Statsig, you can simply add the key-value pair { email: "my_user@statsig.com" }
to privateAttributes
on the user and that’s it!
Updating Users
At some point, your user might need to change. To make Statsig aware of this new user, you will need to make a call to an UpdateUser function.Statsig Options
StatsigClient::Initialize
, in addition to sdk_key
and user
, takes an optional parameter options
that you can provide to customize the StatsigClient. Here are the current options and we are always adding more to the list:
The API to use for all SDK network requests. You should not need to override this unless you have another API that implements the Statsig API endpoints.
Array of EvaluationsDataProvider, used to customize the initialization and update behavior.