I didn’t know this was a thing until Stefan Judis’s post:
<a href="https://www.stefanjudis.com/popular-posts/"
ping="https://www.stefanjudis.com/tracking/">Read popular posts</a>
You give an anchor link a URL via a ping
attribute, and the browser will hit that URL with a web request (a literal PING) when clicked. The headers have a ping-to
key with the href
value of the link.
Why? Data. Wouldn’t it be nice to know what off-site links people are clicking on your website?
Even if you have Google Analytics installed, you don’t get that data by default. You’d have to write something custom or use something like their autotrack plugin with the outboundLinkTracker
. This is non-trivial, as in order to work, it has to have JavaScript intervene, prevent the default action of the link (going to the website), track the event, then tell the browser to actually go to the website. That’s because running a bit of JavaScript to ping your tracking service is unreliable on an off-site click. Your site is unloading and the new site loading as fast as possible, meaning that ping might not get a chance to run.
Permeably with the ping
attribute, you don’t have to do this little JavaScript dance of sending the ping before the page unloads — it will “just work.” That’s a big plus for this technique. It’s so cool to move complex ideas to lower-level languages that work easier and better.
There are heaps of downsides though. You don’t exactly get a nice API for sending along metadata. The best you could do is append a query string for extra data (e.g., was the link in the footer? or was it in a blog post?). But perhaps the biggest limitation is that it’s only for anchor links. If you were building a really serious event tracking thing, you’d want it to be useful for any type of event (not just clicks) on any type of element (not just links). So it’s not terribly surprising this is almost entirely the JavaScript’s domain.
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source https://www.stefanjudis.com/today-i-learned/html-defines-a-ping-attribute-on-anchor-elements-links/
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