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Bibblio Related Content Module

Display content recommendations quickly and easily with Bibblio's pre-built Related Content Module (RCM). To get started you must set up an account.

Installing the assets

CDN (recommended)

The easiest way to use the module is via our CDN. Simply include the assets in your webpage as follows:

<head>

    <!-- CSS -->
    <link rel="preload" type="text/css" href="https://cdn.bibblio.org/rcm/4.29/bib-related-content.min.css" as="style" onload="this.onload=null;this.rel='stylesheet'"/>

    <!-- JavaScript -->
    <script type="application/javascript" charset="UTF-8" src="https://cdn.bibblio.org/rcm/4.29/bib-related-content.min.js" defer></script>

</head>

If you would like to host the assets yourself they can be installed via Bower and NPM.

Bower

The Bower package can be installed like this:

bower install bibblio-related-content-module

And included on a webpage like this:

<head>

    <!-- CSS -->
    <link rel="preload" type="text/css" href="bower_components/bibblio-related-content-module/css/bib-related-content.css" as="style" onload="this.onload=null;this.rel='stylesheet'"/>

    <!-- JavaScript -->
    <script type="application/javascript" charset="UTF-8" src="bower_components/bibblio-related-content-module/js/bib-related-content.js" defer></script>

</head>

NPM

The NPM package can be installed like this:

npm install bibblio-related-content-module

And included on a webpage like this:

<head>

    <!-- CSS -->
    <link rel="preload" type="text/css" href="node_modules/bibblio-related-content-module/css/bib-related-content.css" as="style" onload="this.onload=null;this.rel='stylesheet'"/>

    <!-- JavaScript -->
    <script type="application/javascript" charset="UTF-8" src="node_modules/bibblio-related-content-module/js/bib-related-content.js" defer></script>

</head>

If using NodeJS you may also want to require the module like this:

var Bibblio = require("bibblio-related-content-module");

Importing Content

Once the JS & CSS assets are included, content can be imported to your Bibblio account.

To start importing, the import function needs to be executed. The import function should execute on any page you wish to import to your Bibblio account. Under normal circumstances the import function should be executed upon page load. However, given that there are different implementation constraints, Bibblio does not assume when the import function should be executed, therefore import is not executed on page load by default. Additionally, only one import function is required per page, regardless of how many modules you plan to display.

Example: Initiate a request to Bibblio’s URL ingestion endpoint, on page load, using custom catalogue and content item ids.
<script type="application/javascript" charset="UTF-8">

    window.addEventListener("load", function() {
        Bibblio.import({
            recommendationKey: "YOUR_RECOMMENDATION_KEY",
            autoIngestionCustomCatalogueId: "YOUR_CUSTOM_CATALOGUE_ID",
            customUniqueIdentifier: "YOUR_CUSTOM_UNIQUE_IDENTIFIER"
        });
    });

</script>

Options Fields

The options object is the first and only parameter supplied to the import function. It is used to tailor the page ingestion to your specifications. It is a required parameter, must be a JavaScript object, and can contain the following properties:

Required

recommendationKey (required)

Safely connect to the Bibblio API from a page visitor's browser using a recommendation key. This can be obtained from our API or your management console (click on the Credentials page and then select Manage my keys).

Example: Safely connect to the Bibblio API using your recommendation key.
{
    recommendationKey: "YOUR_RECOMMENDATION_KEY"
}

Optional

autoIngestionCatalogueId (optional)

When auto-ingesting, this property allows you to specify the catalogueId to which a content item should be assigned. This will only take effect on initial ingestion. Imports subsequent to ingestion will disregard this property. It cannot be supplied if autoIngestionCustomCatalogueId is present.

Example: Ingesting to a specific catalogue by id.
{
    autoIngestionCatalogueId: "YOUR_CATALOGUE_ID"
}

autoIngestionCustomCatalogueId (optional)

Specify your own label to identify the catalogue that a content item should be assigned to when auto-ingesting. The specified catalogue will be created if it does not exist. Thereafter it will be reused. Catalogue assignment will only take effect on initial ingestion; imports subsequent to ingestion will disregard this property. It cannot be supplied if autoIngestionCatalogueId is present.

Example: Ingesting to a specific catalogue by custom id.
{
    autoIngestionCustomCatalogueId: "YOUR_CUSTOM_CATALOGUE_ID"
}

autoIngestionUrl (optional)

Specify which URL should be used for page scraping, as well as determine the URL property of a content item. This can be useful if the import function is added to a page where the canonical value links to an external domain. In this case, the canonical value will still be used as a customUniqueIdentifier.

Example: Ingesting to a specific catalogue by custom id.
{
    autoIngestionUrl: "YOUR_URL_FOR_PAGE_SCRAPING"
}

customUniqueIdentifier (optional)

It is possible to use your own identifier when creating a content item. If not supplied, Bibblio will default to the canonical value of a page to assign a customUniqueIdentifier to a content item.

Example: Using your own identifier when creating a content item.
{
    customUniqueIdentifier: "YOUR_CUSTOM_UNIQUE_IDENTIFIER"
}

Displaying Recommendations

Once the JS & CSS assets are included and content items have been imported, the display module can be added to your page(s).

To display recommendation, the init function needs to be executed. The init function accepts an array of JavaScript objects as input. When displaying recommendations the type field should be set to rcm. In this example, only one module is required, so a single Javascript object sits within the array, however it is possible to supply multiple objects to initialize more than one module.

Example A: Initializing one related content module.
<div id="bib--rcm-element"></div>

<script type="application/javascript" charset="UTF-8">

    window.addEventListener("load", function() {
        Bibblio.init([{
            type: "rcm",
            options: {
                targetElementId: "bib--rcm-element",
                recommendationKey: "YOUR_RECOMMENDATION_KEY",
                customUniqueIdentifier: "YOUR_CUSTOM_UNIQUE_ID",
                customCatalogueIds: ["YOUR_CUSTOM_CATALOGUE_ID"],
                recommendationType: "related",
                styleClasses: "bib--box-5 bib--square bib--font-georgia bib--author-show"
            },
            callbacks: {
                onRecommendationsRendered: function (recommendedItems) {
                    console.log(recommendedItems);
                },
                onRecommendationViewed: function (viewedTrackingData) {
                    console.log(viewedTrackingData);
                }
            }
        }]);
    });

</script>
Example B: Initializing two related content modules.
<div id="bib--rcm-element-one"></div>

<div id="bib--rcm-element-two"></div>

<script type="application/javascript" charset="UTF-8">

    window.addEventListener("load", function() {
        Bibblio.init([
            {
                type: "rcm",
                options: {
                    targetElementId: "bib--rcm-element-one",
                    recommendationKey: "YOUR_RECOMMENDATION_KEY",
                    recommendationType: "popular",
                    styleClasses: "bib--row-3 bib--split bib--recency-show",
                    subtitleField: "description",
                    dateFormat: "DMY"
                },
                callbacks: {
                    onRecommendationClick: function (clickedItem, clickEvent) {
                        console.log(clickedItem);
                        console.log(clickEvent);
                    }
                }
            },
            {
                type: "rcm",
                options: {
                    targetElementId: "bib--rcm-element-two",
                    recommendationKey: "YOUR_RECOMMENDATION_KEY",
                    customUniqueIdentifier: "YOUR_CUSTOM_UNIQUE_ID",
                    recommendationType: "personalised",
                    customCatalogueIds: ["YOUR_CUSTOM_CATALOGUE_ID"],
                    styleClasses: "bib--grd-6 bib--tall bib--image-only bib--shine",
                    userId: "INSERT_USER_ID",
                    userMetadata: {
                        occupation: "Nurse",
                        location: "England"
                    },
                    queryStringParams: {
                        itm_source: "Bibblio",
                        itm_medium: "sidebar_widget"
                    }
                }
            }
        ]);
    });

</script>

Options Field

The options field is used to tailor the module to your specifications. It is required, must be a JavaScript object, and can contain the following properties:

Required

recommendationKey (required)

Safely connect to the Bibblio API from a page visitor's browser using a recommendation key. This can be obtained from our API or your management console (click on the Credentials page and then select Manage my keys).

Example: Safely connect to the Bibblio API using your recommendation key.
{
    recommendationKey: "YOUR_RECOMMENDATION_KEY"
}

targetElementId (required)

The DOM id of an HTML element you'd like to initialize as a related content module. (Nb. This will delete any pre-existing content in that element, replacing it solely with the module.) For example, this parameter could have the value bib--rcm-element, provided the following element exists on the page:

Example: Initialize the related content module in a div with an id of bib-rcm-element.
<div id="bib--rcm-element"></div>

Optional

contentItemId (optional)

The Bibblio contentItemId of the content item being displayed. Content recommendations will be based on this Bibblio content item. The contentItemId is provided after creating a content item, and is retrievable when listing your content items.

Example: Retrieve recommendations using the Bibblio content identifier.
{
    contentItemId: "THE_BIBBLIO_CONTENT_ITEM_IDENTIFIER"
}

customUniqueIdentifier (optional)

It is possible to use your own id to retrieve recommendations. To do this, make sure you provide a customUniqueIdentifier when creating a content item. You can then specify the customUniqueIdentifier here, when retrieving recommendations.

Nb: It is advisable to provide either a contentItemId or a customUniqueIdentifier. If neither is provided the module will attempt to retrieve recommendations using the canonical value of the page it has loaded on. This could result in no recommendations being retrieved if the canonical is not present or altered.

Example: Retrieve recommendations using your own content identifier.
{
    customUniqueIdentifier: "YOUR_CUSTOM_UNIQUE_IDENTIFIER"
}

catalogueIds (optional)

The catalogues that recommendations should be retrieved from. The catalogueId of any catalogues you own would be valid. Accepts an array of strings. If not supplied, the default is the same catalogue as the source content item specified upon ingestion. It cannot be supplied if customCatalogueIds is present.

Example A: Retrieve recommendations from one catalogue.
{
    catalogueIds: ["YOUR_CATALOGUE_ID"]
}
Example B: Retrieve recommendations from two catalogues.
{
    catalogueIds: ["YOUR_CATALOGUE_ID_1", "YOUR_CATALOGUE_ID_2"]
}

customCatalogueIds (optional)

The customCatalogueIds that a recommendation should be retrieved from. This allows you to retrieve recommendations for a particular catalogue without having to store a Bibblio catalogueId (see autoIngestionCustomCatalogueId above). Accepts an array of strings. If not supplied, the default is the same catalogue as the source content item specified. It cannot be supplied if catalogueIds is present.

Example A: Retrieve recommendations from one catalogue.
{
    customCatalogueIds: ["YOUR_CUSTOM_CATALOGUE_ID"]
}
Example B: Retrieve recommendations from two catalogues.
{
    customCatalogueIds: ["YOUR_CUSTOM_CATALOGUE_ID_1", "YOUR_CUSTOM_CATALOGUE_ID_2"]
}

autoIngestion (optional)

The Related Content Module is able to ingest content automatically. If the item does not exist and autoIngestion is set to true, the module will request that Bibblio's servers retrieve the page and parse a content item from it. This saves you the trouble of integrating with Bibblio on your backend systems, at the cost of a more complex set of interations and less control when creating content items. When autoIngestion is enabled, a customUniqueIdentifier can be supplied, otherwise the module will assign its own custom unique identifier value to the page using the canonical value.

The item will be ingested the first time it is viewed in a browser. The domain from which it originates must be whitelisted, and future updates to the page text or image will not be recognized or auto-ingested. If you require more thorough integration with your backend systems then it would be best to integrate with the API directly instead.

Example: Have the content automatically ingested if it doesn't exist in Bibblio.
{
    autoIngestion: true
}

dateFormat (optional)

Change the format of the content items' published date when being displayed on the Related Content Module. DMY will display the date as 3 July 2021, MDY as July 3, 2021 and YMD as 2021 July 3. The default is DMY.

Example: Format the content items' published date.
{
    dateFormat: "DMY"
}

hidden (optional)

This lets you perform a full integration without visually displaying the module. This is useful for testing display on a live environment without disrupting the user experience. Entering Bibblio.showModules(); in the developer console will show all hidden modules on the page. The default is false.

More nuanced, device-specific show-and-hide capabilities for displaying modules are available using the Hide add-on. See the Add-ons section below for more.

Example: Don't render the recommendations upon module load.
{
    hidden: true
}

lazyload (optional)

By default, all modules will load their images the moment a user starts scrolling the page, unless the module is already visible on page load, whereupon it will load its images immediately, without listening for an interaction. This lazy loading feature can be disabled by setting this parameter to false.

Example: Disable lazy loading.
{
    lazyLoad: false
}

offset (optional)

Offset the recommendations list before rendering, thereby skipping a specified number of items. This is useful if you'd like to put multiple modules using the same recommendation type on the page without displaying duplicate items. Simply offset the second module by the number of items displayed in the first. The supplied value must be an integer between 1 and 14.

Example: Skip 2 recommendations and start from the 3rd in the list.
{
    offset: 2
}

placeholders (optional)

Replace module tiles with empty placeholder HTML elements at predefined locations. placeholders accepts an array of integer values between 1 and 6 so that, for example, [2,4] will render two empty placeholder elements in the second and fourth tile positions. When rendered, these empty placeholder HTML elements have a distinct CSS class of bib__placeholder that can be used as a lookup when dynamically injecting ad slots or other content in-between recommendations. You can also replace module tiles with populated placeholder HTML elements at predefined locations by supplying the placeholders parameter with a Javascript object. This object needs one or more keys, each being integer values between 1 and 6, which describe the placeholder positions, and each key being assigned a Javascript object with the following fields, title, url, author, description, moduleImage,date. When using the JSON version title and url are required fields.

Example A: Provision two blank placeholder elements in the second and fourth tile positions
{
    placeholders: [2,4]
}
Example B: Provision two populated placeholder elements in the first and third tile positions.
{
    placeholders: {
        1: {
                title: "Click me!",
                url: "https://click.me/to/go/somewhere",
                author: "F. Realz",
                description: "You should really click this.",
                moduleImage: "https://www.example.com/people-happily-clicking.jpg", date: "Today"
            },
        3:  {
                title: "And me!",
                url: "https://click.me/to/go/elsewhere",
                description: "Click me too please.",
                moduleImage: "https://www.example.com/happy-face.jpg",
                date: "Yesterday"
            }
    }
}

queryStringParams (optional)

Append additional query string parameters to the target URL of recommended items. This is particularly useful for specifying analytics parameters such as utm_source. The value should be a JavaScript object. Each property will be added as a parameter to the URL.

Example: Append utm_source=BibblioRCM&utm_campaign=SiteFooter to the URL of all recommended items.
{
    utm_source: "BibblioRCM",
    utm_campaign: "SiteFooter"
}

recommendationType (optional)

Specify the type of recommendations to serve. The types are:

related - Recommendations ignore user behavior and are based purely on relatedness. Requires the contentItemId or customUniqueIdentifier fields.

optimised - Recommendations are rooted in relevance but will also learn from user behavior and continuously adapt to attain better engagement. Requires the contentItemId or customUniqueIdentifier fields.

latest - Recommendations ignore relatedness and are based purely on the datePublished field set, returning those most recently published. Doesn't require the contentItemId or customUniqueIdentifier fields.

popular - Recommendations ignore relatedness and are based purely on aggregated user behaviour. Doesn't require the contentItemId or customUniqueIdentifier fields.

personalised - Recommendations are tailored to a specific user. Requires the userId field. Doesn't require the contentItemId or customUniqueIdentifier fields.

It is best to start with related recommendations, then add optimised, popular or personalised modules elsewhere on the page to fit the site experience you desire. If recommendationType is not supplied, the module will default to optimised. If no optimised recommendations are available, it will fall back to related, and if no related recommendations are available, it will fall back to latest.

Example A: Retrieve related recommendations.
{
    recommendationType: "related",
    contentItemId: "YOUR_CONTENT_ITEM_ID"
}
Example B: Retrieve optimised recommendations.
{
    recommendationType: "optimised",
    contentItemId: "YOUR_CONTENT_ITEM_ID"
}
Example C: Retrieve latest recommendations.
{
    recommendationType: "latest"
}
Example D: Retrieve popular recommendations.
{
    recommendationType: "popular"
}
Example E: Retrieve personalised recommendations.
{
    recommendationType: "personalised",
    userId: "YOUR_SPECIFIC_USER_ID"
}

corpusType (optional)

By specifying syndicated as the corpusType, you could retrieve optimised recommendations across several catalogues from different Bibblio accounts. Syndication requires some setup on Bibblio's part. Please get in touch if you'd like to share traffic directly with other publishers or your own network of sites.

Example: Retrieve syndicated recommendations (requires some setup on Bibblio's part).
{
    corpusType: "syndicated"
}

styleClasses (optional)

Select pre-defined CSS classes that govern the layout, features and interactivity of the Related Content Module. The classes cover everything from the module's tile arrangement, image ratio and text formatting, to the metadata display and mouse interaction effects. A full list of available classes can be found in the CSS directory's readme.

Example A: Simple Related Article Module. A row of three recommendation tiles, with the title beneath the featured images (each image is a 4:3 ratio by default), displaying the dates published.
{
    styleClasses: "bib--row-3 bib--split bib--recency-show"
}
Example B: Content Showcase Module. Two rows of recommendation tiles (two above, three below), each in a square ratio (1:1), with titles overlaid in the Georgia system font, displaying the content authors.
{
    styleClasses: "bib--box-5 bib--square bib--font-georgia bib--author-show"
}
Example C: Book Cover Display Module. A grid of six recommendation tiles (three above, three below), each in a tall (2:3) ratio, displaying the image only until a pointer hover reveals the title and a shine effect.
{
    styleClasses: "bib--grd-6 bib--tall bib--image-only bib--shine"
}

subtitleField (optional)

Specify the content item field you want to use to populate the description value of each recommendation item. This description will be revealed when a pointer hovers over a module tile and the class bib__hover has been added to styleClasses. Any valid content item field can be used. Nested fields are accessed using a period symbol. Providing a value of false will disable the subtitle. The default is headline.

Example A: Use a top level field for the subtitle.
{
    subtitleField: "description"
}
Example B: Use a nested field for the subtitle.
{
    subtitleField: "author.name"
}
Example C: Disable the subtitle.
{
    subtitleField: false
}

truncateTitle (optional)

Set a character length for truncating the titles of recommendations. The minimum value is 1 and maximum is 100. If this field is omitted, the titles are automatically truncated for best fit, based on the module tile arrangement and image ratio, if any, you have specified via styleClasses.

Example: Truncate the recommendation titles to 20 characters.
{
    truncateTitle: 20
}

userId (optional)

Your own unique id for the current site visitor. This allows Bibblio to compute personalized recommendations. This can be supplied for any recommendationType to generate additional training data for Bibblio's personalization algorithms. Please do not provide any personally identifiable information for this field.

Example: Provide a user id.
{
    userId: "YOUR_SPECIFIC_USER_ID"
}

userMetadata (optional)

Allows you to supply additional properties pertaining to the user specified by userId. This will be taken into account when training algorithms that produce personalized recommendations. The value should be a Javascript object and can contain any keys. Be sparing with this data and only include things that are specific to your user and pertinent to your domain. This could include the user's occupation or their field of interest. This cannot be supplied if userId is not present.

Example: Provide user specific metadata.
{
    userMetadata: {
        occupation: "Nurse",
        location: "England"
    }
}

Callbacks Field

The callbacks field is optional. It allows you to supply your own functionality in the render chain. If supplied, it must be a JavaScript object, must specify only the following callback hooks, and each hook must be a Javascript function:

Optional

onRecommendationsRendered (optional)

The supplied function will be called once the module has rendered recommendations. This can be useful for toggling any visual elements that should only be displayed when recommendations have rendered successfully. An array of recommendations returned by Bibblio's API will be passed to this function.

{
  onRecommendationsRendered: function (recommendedItems) {
    console.log(recommendedItems);
  }
}

onRecommendationViewed (optional)

The supplied function will be called when the module has scrolled into view. A JavaScript object containing Bibblio's tracking data for the view event will be passed to this function.

{
  onRecommendationViewed: function (viewedTrackingData) {
    console.log(viewedTrackingData);
  }
}

onRecommendationClick (optional)

The supplied function will be called when a specific recommendation is clicked. This function will receive two parameters. The first parameter will be the specific recommendation that was clicked, and the second parameter will be the DOM click event itself.

{
  onRecommendationClick: function (clickedItem, clickEvent) {
    console.log(clickedItem);
    console.log(clickEvent);
  }
}

Add-ons

The functionality of Bibblio's Related Content Module can be extended by using add-ons. These can include different layouts or display controls, allowing added flexibility when implementing modules. The add-ons are declared within HTML elements that wrap the RCM's element, and can contain parameters to further customize them. No additional JavaScript or CSS is required to enable an add-on.

Hide Add-on

This add-on can stop an RCM rendering on either desktop and tablet or mobile. This is useful if you would like to show a certain module layout on desktop but use another layout on mobile that better fits the screen shape. Hiding an RCM means it does not render in your page DOM, which ensures no API calls or tracked events are made, keeping your usage and activity data clean.

Wrap your module's HTML element in a new element with an id of your choosing, such as bib--hide-element. Within the init function, add a JavaScript object with the type field set to hide. The options field must contain a targetElementId, the value of which must match the id of your wrapping element. Within options, to hide an RCM on mobile devices so that it only displays on desktop and tablets, use hidden: ‘mobile’. Conversely, to hide an RCM on desktop and tablet devices so that it only displays on mobile, use hidden: ‘web’. To hide an RCM on all device types, omit the hidden key from options altogether.

Example: Hiding the related content module on mobile browsers.
<div id="bib--hide-element">
  <div id="bib--rcm-element"></div>
</div>

<script type="application/javascript" charset="UTF-8">

    window.addEventListener("load", function() {
        Bibblio.init([
            {
                type: "rcm",
                options: {
                    targetElementId: "bib--rcm-element",
                    recommendationKey: "YOUR_RECOMMENDATION_KEY"
                }
            },
            {
                type: "hide",
                options: {
                    targetElementId: "bib--hide-element",
                    hidden: "mobile"
                }
            }
        ]);
    });

</script>

Takeover Add-on

Related Content Modules can be rendered within a takeover panel. This panel slides into view when a tab, attached to the side of the viewport, is tapped. One or more modules can be revealed inside the panel. A takeover panel is helpful when displaying recommendations on a page with limited available space, or for rendering on smaller screen sizes.

Wrap your module's HTML element in a new element with an id of your choosing, such as bib--takeover-element. Within the init function, add a JavaScript object with the type field set to takeover. The options field must contain a targetElementId, the value of which must match the id of your wrapping element. The tab's label can be changed using tabText within options. The default label reads "Related articles".

Example: Placing the related content module within a takeover panel.
<div id="bib--takeover-element">
  <div id="bib--rcm-element"></div>
</div>

<script type="application/javascript" charset="UTF-8">

    window.addEventListener("load", function() {
        Bibblio.init([
            {
                type: "rcm",
                options: {
                    targetElementId: "bib--rcm-element",
                    recommendationKey: "YOUR_RECOMMENDATION_KEY",
                    styleClasses: "bib--col-3"
                }
            },
            {
                type: "takeover",
                options: {
                    targetElementId: "bib--takeover-element",
                    tabText: "Related articles"
                }
            }
        ]);
    });

</script>

Combining the Add-ons

A takeover add-on can be inserted within a hide add-on. This is useful if you would like a takeover panel to appear only on mobile. Simply nest your three HTML elements so that the hide add-on element wraps the takeover element which in turn wraps the RCM element.

Example: Placing the related content module within a takover panel that is only visible on mobile browsers.
<div id="bib--hide-element">
  <div id="bib--takeover-element">
    <div id="bib--rcm-element"></div>
  </div>
</div>

<script type="application/javascript" charset="UTF-8">

    window.addEventListener("load", function() {
        Bibblio.init([
            {
                type: "rcm",
                options: {
                    targetElementId: "bib--rcm-element",
                    recommendationKey: 'YOUR_RECOMMENDATION_KEY',
                    styleClasses: 'bib--col-3'
                }
            },
            {
                type: "takeover",
                options: {
                    targetElementId: "bib--takeover-element",
                    tabText: 'Related articles'
                }
            },
            {
                type: "hide",
                options: {
                    targetElementId: "bib--hide-element",
                    hidden: 'web'
                }
            }
        ]);
    });

</script>

Google AMP (Accelerated Mobile Pages)

Bibblio's Related Content Module can be implemented on Google AMP using an amp-iframe. The HTML page that will render inside the iframe is hosted on Bibblio's servers.

Example: Using the related content module with Google AMP.
<amp-iframe width="1" height="1" layout="responsive" resizable sandbox="allow-scripts allow-top-navigation allow-same-origin" src="https://cdn.bibblio.org/rcm/4.29/amp.html?recommendationKey=YOUR_RECOMMENDATION_KEY&customUniqueIdentifier=YOUR_CUSTOM_UNIQUE_IDENTIFIER">
    <div overflow tabindex=0 role=button aria-label="See more">See more!</div>
    <amp-img layout="fill" src="data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAP///wAAACH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAICRAEAOw==" placeholder></amp-img>
</amp-iframe>

All parameters are supported and can be passed in as querystring parameters to the amp-iframe src as above. The format of some parameters will vary due to the constraint of passing data through an iframe URL. These variances are described below.

Some things to note:

  • Providing an <amp-img layout="fill" src="..." placeholder></amp-img> within the amp-iframe tag is necessary to avoid restrictions on module placement.
  • Providing a <div overflow ...> child element is necessary to allow resizing.
  • width and height properties are required by AMP. It's safe to use placeholder values of 1 so long as layout="responsive" resizable is also included ,since the iframe will then scale to the module once rendered.
  • sandbox="allow-scripts allow-top-navigation allow-same-origin" is required. This enables Bibblio's JavaScript within the iframe, allows recommendation clicks to open, and lets the iframe update its size in the parent window.
  • styleClasses are comma-separated when supplied to the iframe.
  • queryStringParams take a different format when supplied to the iframe. They can be supplied directly in the src property without an enclosing queryStringParams=__ container.
Example: Appending utm_source=Bibblio and utm_campaign=related to your recommendation links and using the bib--row-3 and bib--hover styleClasses.
<amp-iframe width="1" height="1" layout="responsive" resizable sandbox="allow-scripts allow-top-navigation allow-same-origin" src="https://cdn.bibblio.org/rcm/4.29/amp.html?recommendationKey=YOUR_RECOMMENDATION_KEY&contentItemId=YOUR_CONTENT_ITEM_ID&utm_source=Bibblio&utm_campaign=related&styleClasses=bib--row-3,bib--hover">
    <div overflow tabindex=0 role=button aria-label="See more">See more!</div>
    <amp-img layout="fill" src="data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAP///wAAACH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAICRAEAOw==" placeholder></amp-img>
</amp-iframe>