Android Client SDK
Installation
You can install the SDK using JitPack. See the latest version and installation steps at https://jitpack.io/#statsig-io/android-sdk.
Initialize the SDK
After installation, you will need to initialize the SDK using a Client SDK key from the "API Keys" tab on the Statsig console.
These Client SDK Keys are intended to be embedded in client side applications. If need be, you can invalidate or create new SDK Keys for other applications/SDK integrations.
Do NOT embed your Server Secret Key in client-side applications, or expose it in any external-facing documents. However, if you accidentally expose it, you can create a new one in the Statsig console.
In addition to the SDK key, you should also pass in a StatsigUser for feature gate targeting and experimentation grouping purposes.
- Java
- Kotlin
import com.statsig.androidsdk.*;
...
public class MainActivity extends AppCompatActivity implements IStatsigCallback {
...
StatsigOptions options = new StatsigOptions();
options.setTier(Tier.PRODUCTION);
StatsigUser user = new StatsigUser("UUID");
Statsig.initializeAsync(app, "client-key", user, this, options);
...
// SDK is usable, but values will be from the cache or defaults (false for gates, {} for configs)
// Once onStatsigInitialize fires, then
@Override
public void onStatsigInitialize() {
// SDK is initialized and has the most up to date values
}
@Override
public void onStatsigUpdateUser() {
// User has been updated and values have been refetched for the new user
}
}
import com.statsig.androidsdk.*
...
async {
Statsig.initialize(
this.application,
"my_client_sdk_key",
StatsigUser("user_id"),
)
}.await()
Working with 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 (think return false;
) by default.
- Java
- Kotlin
if (Statsig.checkGate("new_homepage_design")) {
// Gate is on, show new home page
} else {
// Gate is off, show old home page
}
if (Statsig.checkGate("new_homepage_design")) {
// Gate is on, show new home page
} else {
// Gate is off, show old home page
}
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:
- Java
- Kotlin
DynamicConfig config = Statsig.getConfig("awesome_product_details");
// The 2nd parameter is the default value to be used in case the given parameter name does not exist on
// the Dynamic Config object. This can happen when there is a typo, or when the user is offline and the
// value has not been cached on the client.
String itemName = config.getString("product_name", "Awesome Product v1");
Double price = config.getDouble("price", 10.0);
Boolean shouldDiscount = config.getBoolean("discount", false);
val config = Statsig.getConfig("awesome_product_details")
// The 2nd parameter is the default value to be used in case the given parameter name does not exist on
// the Dynamic Config object. This can happen when there is a typo, or when the user is offline and the
// value has not been cached on the client.
val itemName = config.getString("product_name", "Awesome Product v1")
val price = config.getDouble("price", 10.0)
val shouldDiscount = config.getBoolean("discount", false)
Getting an 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.
- Java
- Kotlin
// Values via getLayer
Layer layer = Statsig.getLayer("user_promo_experiments")
String promoTitle = layer.getString("title", "Welcome to Statsig!");
Double discount = layer.getDouble("discount", 0.1);
// or, via getExperiment
DynamicConfig titleExperiment = Statsig.getExperiment("new_user_promo_title");
DynamicConfig priceExperiment = Statsig.getExperiment("new_user_promo_price");
String promoTitle = titleExperiment.getString("title", "Welcome to Statsig!");
Double discount = priceExperiment.getDouble("discount", 0.1);
...
Double price = msrp * (1 - discount);
// Values via getLayer
val layer = Statsig.getLayer("user_promo_experiments")
val promoTitle = layer.getString("title", "Welcome to Statsig!")
val discount = layer.getDouble("discount", 0.1)
// or, via getExperiment
val titleExperiment = Statsig.getExperiment("new_user_promo_title")
val priceExperiment = Statsig.getExperiment("new_user_promo_price")
val promoTitle = titleExperiment.getString("title", "Welcome to Statsig!")
val discount = priceExperiment.getDouble("discount", 0.1)
...
val price = msrp * (1 - discount);
Logging 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:
- Java
- Kotlin
Statsig.logEvent("purchase", 2.99, Map.of("item_name", "remove_ads"));
Statsig.logEvent("purchase", 2.99, Map.of("item_name" to "remove_ads"))
Learn more about identifying users, group analytics, and best practices for logging events in the logging events guide.
Parameter Stores
Parameter Stores hold a set of parameters for your mobile app. These parameters can be remapped between Statsig entities (Feature Gates, Experiments, and Layers), so you can decouple your code from the configuration in Statsig.
You can read more about the concept here.
Getting a Parameter Store
To fetch a set of parameters, use the following api:
let homepageStore = Statsig.getParameterStore("homepage")
Getting a parameter
You can then access parameters like this:
let title = homepageStore.getString(
"title", // parameter name
"Welcome", // default value
)
let shouldShowUpsell = homepageStore.getBoolean("upsell_upgrade_now", false)
Statsig User
You should provide a StatsigUser object whenever possible when initializing the SDK, passing as much information as possible in order to take advantage of advanced gate and config conditions (like country or OS/browser level checks).Most of the time, the userID
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.
- Java
- Kotlin
StatsigUser newUser = new StatsigUser("new_user_id");
Statsig.updateUserAsync(newUser, this); // this must implement IStatsigCallback
...
@Override
public void onStatsigUpdateUser() {
// User has been updated and values have been refetched for the new user
}
Statsig.updateUser(StatsigUser("new_user_id"))
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 called privateAttributes
, 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!
Statsig Options
You can pass in an optional parameter options
in addition to sdkKey
and user
during initialization to customize the Statsig client. Here are the current options and we are always adding more to the list:
-
api -
String
, default https://api.statsig.com/v1/- The default endpoint to use for all SDK network requests. You should not override this (unless you have another API that implements the Statsig API endpoints)
-
disableCurrentActivityLogging:
Boolean
, defaultfalse
- by default, any custom event your application logs with
Statsig.logEvent()
includes the current top-level activity. This is so we can generate user journey funnels for your users. You can set this parameter to true to disable this behavior.
- by default, any custom event your application logs with
-
disableDiagnosticsLogging:
Boolean
, defaultfalse
- Prevent the SDK from sending useful debug information to Statsig
-
initTimeoutMs:
Long
, default3000
- used to decide how long the Statsig client waits for the initial network request to respond before calling the completion block. The Statsig client will return either cached values (if any) or default values if checkGate/getConfig/getExperiment is called before the initial network request completes.
- if you always want to wait for the latest values fetched from Statsig server, you should set this to 0 so we do not timeout the network request.
- unit is milliseconds.
-
overrideStableID:
String?
, defaultnull
- overrides the
stableID
in the SDK that is set for the user
- overrides the
-
loadCacheAsync:
Boolean
, defaultfalse
- Whether or not the SDK should block on loading saved values from disk.
-
initializeValues:
Map<String, Any>?
, defaultnull
- Provide the
initialize response
values directly to the Android SDK to synchronously initialize the client. You can generate these values from a Statsig Server SDK like the NodeJS Server SDK
- Provide the
-
disableHashing:
Boolean?
, defaultfalse
- When disabled, the SDK will not hash gate/config/experiment names, instead they will be readable as plain text.
- Note: This requires special authorization from Statsig. Reach out to us if you are interested in this feature.
-
customCacheKey:
((sdkKey: String, user: StatsigUser) -> String)
, default:{ sdkKey, user -> "${user.getCacheKey()}:$sdkKey" },
v4.26.0+- By default, client SDKs define a "user" for caching as the set of all IDs (the UserID and CustomIDs) and the sdkKey (so multiple instances don't collide)
- This can mean that a different set of fields will map to the same cached user. The intent is to improve cache hit rate, and provide better defaults
- If you have critical fields that define a user differently which are not considered IDs, you can override the cache key we generate using this function
-
evaluationCallback:
((config: BaseConfig) -> Unit)
, v4.24.0+- A function that can be supplied to the sdk that will be called whenever a gate, config, experiment or layer is checked. The function takes a BaseConfig, which will be one of FeatureGate, DynamicConfig, or Layer, as the only parameter which is the result of the check made.
Methods
- setTier | setEnvironmentParameter | getEnvironment
- used to signal the environment tier the user is currently in.
setTier
can be PRODUCTION, STAGING or DEVELOPMENT. e.g. passing in a value ofTier.STAGING
will allow your users to pass any condition that pass for the staging environment tier, and fail any condition that only passes for other environment tiers.setEnvironmentParameter
can be used for custom tiers, egoptions.setEnvironmentParameter("tier", "test")
Shutting Statsig Down
In order to save users' data and battery usage, as well as prevent logged events from being dropped, we keep event logs in client cache and flush periodically. Because of this, some events may not have been sent when your app shuts down.
To make sure all logged events are properly flushed or saved locally, you should tell Statsig to shutdown when your app is closing:
- Java
- Kotlin
Statsig.shutdown();
Statsig.shutdown()
Local Overrides
If you want to locally override gates/configs/experiments/layers, there are a set of override APIs as follows.
// Overrides the given gate to the specified value
overrideGate(gateName: String, value: Boolean)
// Overrides the given config (dynamic config or experiment) to the provided value
overrideConfig(configName: String, value: Map<String, Any>)
// Removes any overrides associated with the provided gate/config/experiment name
removeOverride(name: String)
// Removes all overrides
removeAllOverrides()
// Returns the set of gate and config overrides currently in place on the client
getAllOverrides(): StatsigOverrides
class StatsigOverrides(
@SerializedName("gates")
val gates: MutableMap<String, Boolean>,
@SerializedName("configs")
val configs: MutableMap<String, Map<String, Any>>
) {}
- These only apply locally on the device where they are being tested - they do not update definitions in the Statsig console or elsewhere.
- These will be persisted to local storage on the device, so overrides will persist across sessions. If you want to clear out the overrides, you can remove them all with
removeAllOverrides
or remove a specific override withremoveOverride
- The local override API is not designed to be a full mock. They are only a convenient way to override the value of the gate/config/etc.
Manual Exposures v4.9.0+
Manually logging exposures can be tricky and may lead to an imbalance in exposure events. For example, only triggering exposures for users in the Test group of an experiment will imbalance the experiment, making it useless.
Added in version 4.9.0, you can now query your gates/experiments without triggering an exposure as well as manually logging your exposures.
- Check Gate
- Get Config
- Get Experiment
- Get Layer
To check a gate without an exposure being logged, call the following.
// Kotlin
val result = Statsig.checkGateWithExposureLoggingDisabled("a_gate_name")
// Java
boolean result = Statsig.checkGateWithExposureLoggingDisabled("a_gate_name");
Later, if you would like to expose this gate, you can call the following.
// Kotlin
Statsig.manuallyLogGateExposure("a_gate_name")
// Java
Statsig.manuallyLogGateExposure("a_gate_name");
To get a dynamic config without an exposure being logged, call the following.
// Kotlin
val config = Statsig.getConfigWithExposureLoggingDisabled("a_config_name")
// Java
DynamicConfig config = Statsig.getConfigWithExposureLoggingDisabled("a_config_name");
Later, if you would like to expose the dynamic config, you can call the following.
// Kotlin
Statsig.manuallyLogConfigExposure("a_config_name")
// Java
Statsig.manuallyLogConfigExposure("a_config_name");
To get an experiment without an exposure being logged, call the following.
// Kotlin
val experiment = Statsig.getExperimentWithExposureLoggingDisabled("an_experiment_name")
// Java
DynamicConfig experiment = Statsig.getExperimentWithExposureLoggingDisabled("an_experiment_name");
Later, if you would like to expose the experiment, you can call the following.
// Kotlin
Statsig.manuallyLogExperimentExposure("an_experiment_name", false)
// Java
Statsig.manuallyLogExperimentExposure("an_experiment_name", false);
To get a layer parameter without an exposure being logged, call the following.
// Kotlin
val layer = Statsig.getLayerWithExposureLoggingDisabled("a_layer_name", false)
val results = layer.getString("a_parameter_name", "fallback")
// Java
Layer layer = Statsig.getLayerWithExposureLoggingDisabled("a_layer_name");
String result = layer.getString("a_parameter_name", "fallback");
Later, if you would like to expose the layer parameter, you can call the following.
// Kotlin
Statsig.manuallyLogLayerParameterExposure("a_layer_name", "a_parameter_name", false)
// Java
Statsig.manuallyLogLayerParameterExposure("a_layer_name", "a_parameter_name", false);
stableID
Each client SDK has the notion of stableID, and identifier that is generated the first time the SDK is initialized and is stored locally for all future sessions. Unless storage is wiped (or app deleted), the stableID will not change. This allows us to run device level experiments and experiments when other user identifiable information is unavailable (Logged out users).
You can get the stableID for the current device with:
Statsig.getStableID();
If you have your own form of stableID and would prefer to use it instead of the Statsig generated ID, you can override it through StatsigOptions:
val opts = StatsigOptions(overrideStableID = "my_stable_id")
Statsig.initialize(app, "client-xyx", options = opts)
Using multiple instances of the SDK
Our documentation up to this point guides you through setting up your Statsig integration via the singleton Statsig.
There are cases where you may need to create multiple instances of the Statsig SDK. Each SDK supports this as well - the Statsig
singleton wraps a single instance of the SDK (typically called a StatsigClient
) that you can instantiate.
🔥IMPORTANT: You must use a different SDK key for each sdk instance you create for this to work. Various functionality of the Statsig client is keyed on the SDK key being used. Using the same key will lead to collisions.
All top level static methods from the singleton carry over as instance methods. To create an instance of the Statsig sdk:
- Java
- Kotlin
StatsigClient client = new StatsigClient();
client.initializeAsync(application, sdkKey, user, callback, options);
var client: StatsigClient = StatsigClient()
client.initialize(application, sdkKey, user, options)
FAQ
How do I run experiments for logged out users?
See the guide on device level experiments