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Web Application Development with R Using Shiny

Web Application Development with R Using Shiny

By : Chris Beeley, Shitalkumar R. Sukhdeve
3.8 (4)
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Web Application Development with R Using Shiny

Web Application Development with R Using Shiny

3.8 (4)
By: Chris Beeley, Shitalkumar R. Sukhdeve

Overview of this book

Web Application Development with R Using Shiny helps you become familiar with the complete R Shiny package. The book starts with a quick overview of R and its fundamentals, followed by an exploration of the fundamentals of Shiny and some of the things that it can help you do. You’ll learn about the wide range of widgets and functions within Shiny and how they fit together to make an attractive and easy to use application. Once you have understood the basics, you'll move on to studying more advanced UI features, including how to style apps in detail using the Bootstrap framework or and Shiny's inbuilt layout functions. You'll learn about enhancing Shiny with JavaScript, ranging from adding simple interactivity with JavaScript right through to using JavaScript to enhance the reactivity between your app and the UI. You'll learn more advanced Shiny features of Shiny, such as uploading and downloading data and reports, as well as how to interact with tables and link reactive outputs. Lastly, you'll learn how to deploy Shiny applications over the internet, as well as and how to handle storage and data persistence within Shiny applications, including the use of relational databases. By the end of this book, you'll be ready to create responsive, interactive web applications using the complete R (v 3.4) Shiny (1.1.0) suite.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)
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Modals

Modals are a UI element from Bootstrap and are pop-up messages that can tell your user more about what the application is doing. They can be useful to give a user warnings, or to allow the user to request more information about an output if they wish to know more. You can write a modal very simply, using two functions in the server.R file. The modalDialog function produces the modal, and the showModal function shows it. You can use them together just like this:

showModal(modalDialog(
title = "Warning",
"This is a warning"
))

This will give us a simple dialog with a title and a main section:

But we can do more interesting things than this with modal dialogs. There are two ways that we can expand their functionality. First, because the modalDialog() function will accept any Shiny UI elements, not just text, you can add HTML elements such as horizontal...

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