Claude Code Plugins

Community-maintained marketplace

Feedback

|

Install Skill

1Download skill
2Enable skills in Claude

Open claude.ai/settings/capabilities and find the "Skills" section

3Upload to Claude

Click "Upload skill" and select the downloaded ZIP file

Note: Please verify skill by going through its instructions before using it.

SKILL.md

name posthog-sdk-patterns
description Apply production-ready PostHog SDK patterns for TypeScript and Python. Use when implementing PostHog integrations, refactoring SDK usage, or establishing team coding standards for PostHog. Trigger with phrases like "posthog SDK patterns", "posthog best practices", "posthog code patterns", "idiomatic posthog".
allowed-tools Read, Write, Edit
version 1.0.0
license MIT
author Jeremy Longshore <jeremy@intentsolutions.io>

PostHog SDK Patterns

Overview

Production-ready patterns for PostHog SDK usage in TypeScript and Python.

Prerequisites

  • Completed posthog-install-auth setup
  • Familiarity with async/await patterns
  • Understanding of error handling best practices

Instructions

Step 1: Implement Singleton Pattern (Recommended)

// src/posthog/client.ts
import { PostHogClient } from '@posthog/sdk';

let instance: PostHogClient | null = null;

export function getPostHogClient(): PostHogClient {
  if (!instance) {
    instance = new PostHogClient({
      apiKey: process.env.POSTHOG_API_KEY!,
      // Additional options
    });
  }
  return instance;
}

Step 2: Add Error Handling Wrapper

import { PostHogError } from '@posthog/sdk';

async function safePostHogCall<T>(
  operation: () => Promise<T>
): Promise<{ data: T | null; error: Error | null }> {
  try {
    const data = await operation();
    return { data, error: null };
  } catch (err) {
    if (err instanceof PostHogError) {
      console.error({
        code: err.code,
        message: err.message,
      });
    }
    return { data: null, error: err as Error };
  }
}

Step 3: Implement Retry Logic

async function withRetry<T>(
  operation: () => Promise<T>,
  maxRetries = 3,
  backoffMs = 1000
): Promise<T> {
  for (let attempt = 1; attempt <= maxRetries; attempt++) {
    try {
      return await operation();
    } catch (err) {
      if (attempt === maxRetries) throw err;
      const delay = backoffMs * Math.pow(2, attempt - 1);
      await new Promise(r => setTimeout(r, delay));
    }
  }
  throw new Error('Unreachable');
}

Output

  • Type-safe client singleton
  • Robust error handling with structured logging
  • Automatic retry with exponential backoff
  • Runtime validation for API responses

Error Handling

Pattern Use Case Benefit
Safe wrapper All API calls Prevents uncaught exceptions
Retry logic Transient failures Improves reliability
Type guards Response validation Catches API changes
Logging All operations Debugging and monitoring

Examples

Factory Pattern (Multi-tenant)

const clients = new Map<string, PostHogClient>();

export function getClientForTenant(tenantId: string): PostHogClient {
  if (!clients.has(tenantId)) {
    const apiKey = getTenantApiKey(tenantId);
    clients.set(tenantId, new PostHogClient({ apiKey }));
  }
  return clients.get(tenantId)!;
}

Python Context Manager

from contextlib import asynccontextmanager
from posthog import PostHogClient

@asynccontextmanager
async def get_posthog_client():
    client = PostHogClient()
    try:
        yield client
    finally:
        await client.close()

Zod Validation

import { z } from 'zod';

const posthogResponseSchema = z.object({
  id: z.string(),
  status: z.enum(['active', 'inactive']),
  createdAt: z.string().datetime(),
});

Resources

Next Steps

Apply patterns in posthog-core-workflow-a for real-world usage.