An Easy Smart App Banner for promoting mobile app installs based on the Safari Apple Experience. Includes support for Safari too.
npm install @easy-smart-app-banner/core 
An Easy Smart App Banner for promoting mobile app installs based on the Safari Apple Experience.
> This isn't for everyone. Most people should probably prefer the PWA approach. However, if you need a 'simple' banner that redirects to a _native_ mobile app then keep reading.
>
> For Safari support see Safari Support.
> For specific details on iOS and Safari, read here.
> Likewise for Android see here.
- Typescript support
- Standalone/Frameworkless
- Small! 14.71 kB │ gzip: 4.37 kB │ map: 52.03 kB
- Platform specific
- custom banner for iOS (non-Safari) and Android user agents
- ~~Safari specific config~~ See Safari Support
- Option, use SCSS/Sass variables to configure the banner as needed
- Cookie-based dismissal, dismiss once per browser
---
``sh`
npm i -S @easy-smart-app-banner/core
See here
This libary currently excludes Safari, as it is not possible to support Safari via a library/plugin/etc. Support for the native Safari smart app banner MUST be provided via static meta tags in your site directly. Safari currently only supports parsing this metadata immediately on page load and will not parse any metadata added after this point. If you want to natively include the Safari banner, then read on here.
Several options have platform specific overrides. These take precedence over any equivalent option when running on the relevant platform.
> For specific details on iOS and Safari specifically, read here. For Android see here.
#### Icon
A single icon is typical, but specific ones can be configured.
`ts`
{
icon: '/assets/my-icon.jpeg',
androidIcon: null,
appleIcon: null,
}
#### Price
The price tagline defaults to FREE with platform specific defaults for both Android and iOS platforms.
`ts`
{
price: 'FREE',
androidPrice: 'FREE - On the Google Play Store',
applePrice: 'GET - On the App Store'
}
#### Call to Action Button Label
`ts`
{
buttonLabel: 'View',
androidButtonLabel: null,
appleButtonLabel: null
}
Styles can be overriden using the provided SCSS/Sass variables. See here.
You can provide these styles as needed by using the .scss files instead,
`scss
@use 'smart-app-banner/dist/variables' as *;
// overwrite as needed
$background-color: #000;
`
> Looking for a platform that isn't here? Propose a PR to add it!
UA strings are a dime a dozen, that's why in verbose mode (see Configuration), the platform parsing utility is exposed to the window object for easy testing. In your browser console,
`sh`
const myUa = window.navigator.userAgent;
getCurrentPlatform(myUa)
This is especially useful when debugging known UA strings that may not be supported. If you think a particular UA should be supported, open a pull request!
To get started, pull the repo and run a build as well as the tests.
> don't forget to run npm i!
`ts`
npm run build
npm run test
You can checkout the rest of the commands in the package.json.
The next step would be to boot a demo project. Checkout the Vue demo here.
1. Checkout a new branch release/major.minor.patchnpm version major|minor|patch`
2. Create the new version using
3. Update the README's as needed (bump the size note)
4. Publish the branch
Having merged the PR for that branch, use GitHub and the configured GitHub Action to generate a release with a matching tag for the newly created version.
MIT License © 2025-PRESENT Albert Ferguson