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[[File:ShinyUpload.png|100px]]
[[File:ShinyUpload.png|100px]]


More shiny examples can be found on https://github.com/rstudio/shiny-examples shiny-examples.
More shiny examples can be found on https://github.com/rstudio/shiny-examples 188 shiny-examples (note this is not what runExample("08_html") used. '''runExample()''' used local files that contain only [https://github.com/rstudio/shiny/tree/main/inst/examples 11 examples]). The local directory is ''/Library/Frameworks/R.framework/Versions/4.2/Resources/library/shiny/'' for R 4.2.x on macOS.


<strike>shiny depends on [http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/websockets/index.html websockets], caTools, bitops, digest packages.</strike>
<strike>shiny depends on [http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/websockets/index.html websockets], caTools, bitops, digest packages.</strike>
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* [https://hosting.analythium.io/the-best-resources-for-learning-shiny/ The Best Resources for Learning Shiny App Development]
* [https://hosting.analythium.io/the-best-resources-for-learning-shiny/ The Best Resources for Learning Shiny App Development]
* [https://appsilon.com/best-r-shiny-books-and-courses/ Top 7 Best R Shiny Books and Courses That Are Completely Free]
* [https://appsilon.com/best-r-shiny-books-and-courses/ Top 7 Best R Shiny Books and Courses That Are Completely Free]
* [https://www.r-bloggers.com/2024/02/level-up-your-r-shiny-team-skills-with-our-free-ebook/ Level Up Your R/Shiny Team Skills with Our Free Ebook]


= Deploy to run locally =
= Deploy to run locally =
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# Open your browser (Chrome or Firefox works), and type the address '''http://localhost:7510'''. You will see something magic happen.
# Open your browser (Chrome or Firefox works), and type the address '''http://localhost:7510'''. You will see something magic happen.
# If we don't want to play with it, we can close the browser and close the command console (hit 'x')too.
# If we don't want to play with it, we can close the browser and close the command console (hit 'x')too.
== How to run an R shiny app ==
* [https://deanattali.com/blog/building-shiny-apps-tutorial/ Building Shiny apps – an interactive tutorial] by Dean Attali
* Different ways:
** Click "Run App" in RStudio
** Call shiny::runApp(shinyApp(ui=ui, server=server, options = list(port = 3838))
** Call [https://shiny.rstudio.com/reference/shiny/latest/runApp.html shiny::runApp("~/Directory")] in your R console. This also works if we replaced a directory with an R file.
** R -e "shiny::runApp('~/shinyapp')" from a terminal
* An [https://gist.github.com/senthilthyagarajan/a714446c9acd8127e4cbef6ede09b1fc example] of "app.R". Edit a table via the "DT" package.
* [https://www.mango-solutions.com/turn-shiny-application-into-a-tablet-or-desktop-app/ Turn a shiny application into a tablet or desktop app]


== rmarkdown::run() instead of rmarkdown::render() ==
== rmarkdown::run() instead of rmarkdown::render() ==
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[https://www.jasperginn.nl/shiny-server-series-pt1/ Shiny server series part 1: setting up]. It includes setting up A- and CNAME records on DigitalOcean.
[https://www.jasperginn.nl/shiny-server-series-pt1/ Shiny server series part 1: setting up]. It includes setting up A- and CNAME records on DigitalOcean.


= Deploy on shinyapps.io =
== Deploy on Github Pages: shinylive ==
See [http://shiny.rstudio.com/articles/shinyapps.html Getting started with shinyapps.io] page and [https://www.shinyapps.io/admin/#/dashboard Dashboard] page.
<ul>
<li>https://posit-dev.github.io/r-shinylive/
* Shinylive Code Editor https://shinylive.io/r/editor/
* [https://cloud.r-project.org/web/packages/shinylive/index.html CRAN] (not the latest)
* [https://github.com/posit-dev/r-shinylive/ Github] (latest)
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RcwvG7dtMqU {shinylive}: Serverless Shiny Apps]


[https://www.shinyapps.io/#pricing Limitations of the free account] (5 applications, 25 active hours per month) on shinyapps.io.
<li>The backend [https://docs.r-wasm.org/webr/latest/ WebR] - R in the Browser (not an R package).
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KIebBv5kKmU How to run Shiny Apps in your browser with WebR (webr.bundle)]
<li>https://shiny.posit.co/py/docs/shinylive.html Shinylive for Python and [https://github.com/posit-dev/py-shinylive Github]
* [https://www.r-bloggers.com/2024/05/shiny-for-python-shinylive-how-to-run-shiny-for-python-apps-without-a-python-server/ Shiny for Python Shinylive: How to Run Shiny for Python Apps Without a Python Server]


[https://hosting.analythium.io/how-many-shiny-apps-can-you-host-for-free/ How Many Shiny Apps Can You Host for Free?]
<li>[https://github.com/RamiKrispin/deploy-flex-actions Deploying flexdashboard on Github Pages with Docker and Github Actions] 2022


[https://blog.rmhogervorst.nl/blog/2021/02/27/deploy-to-shinyapps-io-from-github-actions/ Deploy to Shinyapps.io from Github Actions]
<li>[https://github.com/RamiKrispin/shinylive-r Deploy Shinylive R App on Github Pages] and the [https://medium.com/@rami.krispin/deploy-shiny-app-on-github-pages-b4cbd433bdc post on Medium], 2023/9/26.
* It has good links to RStudio/Posit conf about shinylive
* VScode & a dockerized environment


Shinyapps.io can accept google account to sign up. I create an account and a test application/instance on
<li>[https://r-posts.com/add-shiny-in-quarto-blog-with-shinylive/ Add shiny in quarto blog with shinylive] 2024/3/10. Suppose we have a file ''app.R'' in ~/Documents/shinylive folder.
* Install shinylive
:<syntaxhighlight lang='r'>
# install.packages("pak")


> pak::pak("posit-dev/r-shinylive")
> packageVersion("shinylive")
[1] ‘0.1.1.9000’
</syntaxhighlight>
* Method 1: shinylive via web page. Just one line is need. It will output the local URL. [https://arraytools.github.io/shinylive_out/ My testing page on Github]. To put it on github, go to the repository's setting page (make sure the repository is public). Click on "Pages" on LHS. In the Branch, select "main" branch and "/root" directory.
:<syntaxhighlight lang='r'>
> shinylive::export('~/Documents/shinylive', '~/Documents/shinylive_out')
...
Run the following in an R session to serve the app:
  httpuv::runStaticServer("~/Documents/shinylive_out")
> httpuv::runStaticServer("~/Documents/shinylive_out")
Serving: '~/Documents/shinylive_out'
View at: http://127.0.0.1:7446
Press Esc or Ctrl + C to stop the server
</syntaxhighlight>
* Method 2: embed shinylive in Quarto blog. Need to install [https://github.com/quarto-ext/shinylive?tab=readme-ov-file#readme Shinylive Quarto extension]
:<syntaxhighlight lang='r'>
quarto add quarto-ext/shinylive
</syntaxhighlight>
:After that, modify the ''yaml'' of your [https://github.com/zarathucorp/blog/blob/master/posts/2024-03-04-shinylive/index.qmd index.qmd] and put the contents of the app.R in a code chunk.
</ul>
== Deploy to Digital Ocean ==
[https://discindo.org/post/how-to-deploy-shiny-application-to-digital-ocean-using-github-actions/ How to deploy Shiny application to Digital Ocean using GitHub Actions]
= Deploy on shinyapps.io: rsconnect package =
About the account
* [http://shiny.rstudio.com/articles/shinyapps.html Getting started with shinyapps.io] page and [https://www.shinyapps.io/admin/#/dashboard Dashboard] page.
* [https://www.shinyapps.io/#pricing Limitations of the free account] (5 applications, 25 active hours per month) on shinyapps.io.
* [https://hosting.analythium.io/how-many-shiny-apps-can-you-host-for-free/ How Many Shiny Apps Can You Host for Free?]
* [https://blog.rmhogervorst.nl/blog/2021/02/27/deploy-to-shinyapps-io-from-github-actions/ Deploy to Shinyapps.io from Github Actions]
* [https://hosting.analythium.io/push-button-publishing-for-shiny-apps/ Push Button Publishing for Shiny Apps]
Shinyapps.io can accept google account to sign up.
* <strike>https://taichimd.shinyapps.io/stock/ (quantmod, ggplot2, reshape2, magrittr, rvest packages were used)</strike>
* <strike>https://taichimd.shinyapps.io/stock/ (quantmod, ggplot2, reshape2, magrittr, rvest packages were used)</strike>
* <strike>https://taichimd.shinyapps.io/tspgov (ggplot2, reshape2, magrittr, rvest, plotly)</strike>, [https://www.tsp.gov/fund-performance/ Performance]
* <strike>https://taichimd.shinyapps.io/tspgov (ggplot2, reshape2, magrittr, rvest, plotly)</strike>, [https://www.tsp.gov/fund-performance/ Performance]
* https://shiny.taichimd.us/shiny-examples.html 188 shiny examples. [https://gist.github.com/arraytools/e53610426523c91cae0c487b5dd148e0 source code for this HTML]
* https://taichimd.shinyapps.io/Lasso_Simulation/ Lasso with simulated data
* https://taichimd.shinyapps.io/Lasso_Simulation/ Lasso with simulated data
* https://taichimd.shinyapps.io/shinysurvival/ Kaplan-Meier curves plotter
* https://taichimd.shinyapps.io/cran-downloads/ (a backup copy of hadley shiny app). Some packages to test:  
* https://taichimd.shinyapps.io/cran-downloads/ (a backup copy of hadley shiny app). Some packages to test:  
** ggpubr, survminer, GGally, glmnet, survAUC
** ggpubr, survminer, GGally, glmnet, survAUC
** glmnet, SGL, MSGLasso, grplasso, biospear
** glmnet, SGL, MSGLasso, grplasso, biospear
** dockerfiler, stevedore, babelwhale, liftr
** dockerfiler, stevedore, babelwhale, liftr
* [https://hosting.analythium.io/push-button-publishing-for-shiny-apps/ Push Button Publishing for Shiny Apps]


Note:
Note:


# The R packages our shiny app uses will be automatically downloaded by shinyapps.io service. See the ''package dependencies'' section on http://shiny.rstudio.com/articles/shinyapps.html and [https://docs.rstudio.com/shinyapps.io/getting-started.html#using-your-r-packages-in-the-cloud Using your R packages in the cloud].
# [https://docs.rstudio.com/shinyapps.io/appendix.html#default-system-packages Default System Packages].
# [https://docs.rstudio.com/shinyapps.io/appendix.html#default-system-packages Default System Packages].
# Two commands are needed to upload an app: 1. '''rsconnect()''' [the full command is copied from account's token page. 2. '''deployApp()''' [assume we are in the right working directory].
# Two commands are needed to upload an app:  
# After we run rsconnect() command to deploy our apps, a new subfolder '''rsconnect''' will be created under our app folder. I add this folder to .gitignore file.
#* [https://rstudio.github.io/rsconnect/reference/setAccountInfo.html rsconnect::setAccountInfo()] [the full command is copied from account's token page.  
#* [https://rstudio.github.io/rsconnect/reference/deployApp.html rsconnect::deployApp()] [assume we are in the right working directory]. If the machine contains several accounts, we can use deployApp(account = "XXXX") to specify the account we want to deploy the app. After successful deployment, the browser will open the URL for our app.
# After we run rsconnect() command to deploy our apps, a new subfolder '''rsconnect''' will be created under our app folder. I add this folder to .gitignore file. But it seems this file/folder does not contain any secret information. So not worry.
# The ''rsconnect'' stores account information. If we get the app from another account make sure to delete this subfolder before we run ''rsconnect::deployApp()''; otherwise we will get an error message ''Error: HTTP 403 .... Forbidden'''; see [https://community.rstudio.com/t/i-cant-deploy-my-app-with-a-name-that-was-used-in-a-previous-deleted-app/35223 I can't deploy my app with a name that was used in a previous deleted app].
# The ''rsconnect'' stores account information. If we get the app from another account make sure to delete this subfolder before we run ''rsconnect::deployApp()''; otherwise we will get an error message ''Error: HTTP 403 .... Forbidden'''; see [https://community.rstudio.com/t/i-cant-deploy-my-app-with-a-name-that-was-used-in-a-previous-deleted-app/35223 I can't deploy my app with a name that was used in a previous deleted app].
# For the shiny apps we uploaded to shinyapps.io, we can download them back. The download bundle will also include '''packrat''' subfolder (packrat.lock file and desc subfolder). See [[R_packages#packrat_.28reproducible_search.29:_project_specific_package_managment|R packages &rarr; packrat]] for more about packrat.
# For the shiny apps we uploaded to shinyapps.io, we can download them back. The download bundle will also include '''packrat''' subfolder (packrat.lock file and desc subfolder). See [[R_packages#packrat_.28reproducible_search.29:_project_specific_package_managment|R packages &rarr; packrat]] for more about packrat.
Caveats:
# I cannot upload my shiny app [https://taichimd.shinyapps.io/shinysurvival/ shinySurvival] when it contains data in a subdirectory.
# When the app is running perfectly locally, it gives some errors when it is deployed to the shinyapps.io. Looking at the app log does not help too much.
== deployApp() ==
<ul>
<li>Choose which files ignored deploy to shinyapps.io. See [https://www.r-bloggers.com/2021/02/deploy-to-shinyapps-io-from-github-actions/ Deploy to Shinyapps.io from Github Actions]
<pre>
deployApp(, appFiles= c("app.R" #, you can specify which files to deploy,
                                #or keep this NULL to deploy everything
                        ),
          appName = error_on_missing_name("MASTERNAME"),
          appTitle = "shinyapplication")
</pre>
</ul>
== Packages ==
<ul>
<li>The R packages our shiny app uses will be automatically downloaded by shinyapps.io service. See the ''package dependencies'' section on http://shiny.rstudio.com/articles/shinyapps.html and [https://docs.rstudio.com/shinyapps.io/getting-started.html#using-your-r-packages-in-the-cloud Using your R packages in the cloud].
<li>When you deploy your application, the '''rsconnect''' package detects the packages that your application uses by looking for explicit '''library()''' calls within your application. Be aware that you should not have an explicit '''install.packages()''' call within your ui.R or server.R files.
<li>Currently the shinyapps.io service supports deploying packages installed from '''CRAN, GitHub''', and '''BioConductor'''.
<li>[https://rdrr.io/cran/rsconnect/man/appDependencies.html rsconnect::appDependencies()] - Recursively detect all package dependencies for an application.
<li>Error when trying to deploy to shinyapps.io: Application depends on package "package" but it is not. You have to fool the shinyapps (or rsconnect) package a bit so that it does not detect package as a literal package name.
<pre>
do.call(library, list(package = package, character.only = TRUE))
</pre>
<li>How to specify package versions when deploying Shiny app to shinyapps.io? See the next item.
<li>[https://community.rstudio.com/t/shiny-app-which-depends-on-package-on-github/46354 Shiny app which depends on package on GitHub?] '''You should not install packages inside your shiny app, just install it locally and rsconnect will figure out how to install it based on your local library, you just have to load the library inside your app.''' Remember [https://rdrr.io/r/utils/packageDescription.html packageDescription()] records all information even a package installed from a specific commit from Github repository.
<li>(Is this outdated?) In order for BioConductor packages to install succesfully on shinyapps.io, the '''repos''' option must be configured, either directly or by using '''setRepositories()''', to include the BioConductor repositories in addition to CRAN.  [https://rdrr.io/r/utils/setRepositories.html setRepositories()]
<pre>
setRepositories(addURLs = c(BioC = "https://bioconductor.org/packages/3.8/bioc"))
</pre>
<li>[https://stackoverflow.com/a/73145538 Deploy shiny app using custom package]. Also use '''renv''' or '''packrat''' package.
<li>[https://community.rstudio.com/t/how-to-manage-r-package-dependencies-for-shiny-app-deployment-docker/18593/2 How to manage R package dependencies for shiny app deployment (docker)]  packrat
<li>[https://support.posit.co/hc/en-us/articles/216528108-Deploying-packrat-projects-to-Shiny-Server-Pro Deploying packrat projects to Shiny Server Pro] packrat
<li>[https://debruine.github.io/shinyintro/sharing.html Building Web Apps with R Shiny] ebook
<li>[https://www.r-bloggers.com/2021/02/deploy-to-shinyapps-io-from-github-actions/ Deploy to Shinyapps.io from Github Actions]
</ul>
== Deploying a development version of a shiny app ==
<pre>
rsconnect::deployApp(..., appName="MyApp")
rsconnect::deployApp(..., appName="MyApp_dev")
</pre>


= Shiny server installation =
= Shiny server installation =
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== Ubuntu & firewall ==
== Ubuntu & firewall ==
In my case, I need to modify the firewall to allow traffic through to Shiny Server '''sudo ufw allow 3838'''. See [https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-set-up-shiny-server-on-ubuntu-16-04 How to Set Up Shiny Server on Ubuntu 16.04]. The tutorial also covers '''Securing Shiny Server with a Reverse Proxy and SSL Certificate'''.
* In my case, I need to modify the firewall to allow traffic through to Shiny Server '''sudo ufw allow 3838'''. See [https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-set-up-shiny-server-on-ubuntu-16-04 How to Set Up Shiny Server on Ubuntu 16.04]. The tutorial also covers '''Securing Shiny Server with a Reverse Proxy and SSL Certificate'''.
* [https://blog.rwhitedwarf.com/post/deploy_shiny_on_debian/ Deploy your own Shiny app server with debian] 2023-1


==  RHEL/CentOS 7 ==
==  RHEL/CentOS 7 ==
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* [https://hosting.analythium.io/file-transfer-based-publishing-for-shiny-apps/ File Transfer Based Publishing for Shiny Apps]
* [https://hosting.analythium.io/file-transfer-based-publishing-for-shiny-apps/ File Transfer Based Publishing for Shiny Apps]


= How to run an R shiny app =
= Shiny for Python =
* [https://deanattali.com/blog/building-shiny-apps-tutorial/ Building Shiny apps – an interactive tutorial] by Dean Attali
https://shiny.rstudio.com/py/
* Three ways
 
** Click "Run App" in RStudio
= Shiny Assistant =
** Call [https://shiny.rstudio.com/reference/shiny/latest/runApp.html shiny::runApp("~/Directory")] in your R console
* https://gallery.shinyapps.io/assistant/#
** R -e "shiny::runApp('~/shinyapp')" from a terminal
* [https://shiny.posit.co/blog/posts/shiny-assistant/?s=09 Shiny assistant] 2024/10/9
* An [https://gist.github.com/senthilthyagarajan/a714446c9acd8127e4cbef6ede09b1fc example] of "app.R". Edit a table via the "DT" package.
 
* [https://www.mango-solutions.com/turn-shiny-application-into-a-tablet-or-desktop-app/ Turn a shiny application into a tablet or desktop app]
= Simplifying Parts Of A Shiny App by Creating Functions =
[https://thatdatatho.com/simplifying-r-shiny-app-functions/ Simplifying Parts Of A Shiny App by Creating Functions]
 
= shinyuieditor =
[https://rstudio.github.io/shinyuieditor/articles/quick-start.html shinyuieditor] package
 
= Shiny UI Prototype Builder =
[https://ashbaldry.github.io/designer/ designer] package


= How to Build a Data Analysis App in R Shiny =
= How to Build a Data Analysis App in R Shiny =
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= The R Shiny packages you need for your web apps =
= The R Shiny packages you need for your web apps =
http://enhancedatascience.com/2017/07/10/the-packages-you-need-for-your-r-shiny-application/
https://www.r-bloggers.com/2017/07/the-r-shiny-packages-you-need-for-your-web-apps/


== Other web apps ==
== Other web apps ==
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* [https://hosting.analythium.io/using-systemd-to-run-shiny-apps/ Using systemd to Run Shiny Apps]
* [https://hosting.analythium.io/using-systemd-to-run-shiny-apps/ Using systemd to Run Shiny Apps]
* [https://hosting.analythium.io/running-shiny-server-in-docker/ Running Shiny Server in Docker]
* [https://hosting.analythium.io/running-shiny-server-in-docker/ Running Shiny Server in Docker]
* [https://hosting.analythium.io/shiny-apps-with-docker-compose-part-1-development/ Shiny Apps with Docker Compose, Part 1: Development]
* [https://hosting.analythium.io/shiny-apps-with-docker-compose-part-1-development/ Shiny Apps with Docker Compose, Part 1: Development] 2021
* [https://github.com/openbiox/UCSCXenaShiny UCSCXenaShiny]: An R package for interactively exploring UCSC Xena
* [https://www.jumpingrivers.com/blog/shiny-auto-docker/ Automating Dockerfile creation for Shiny apps] 2022/10/20
* [https://www.r-bloggers.com/2023/11/r-shiny-docker-how-to-run-shiny-apps-in-a-docker-container/ R Shiny Docker: How To Run Shiny Apps in a Docker Container] 2023/11/28


= Dashboard =
= Dashboard =
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[https://moderndata.plot.ly/introducing-dash-bio-for-r/ Introducing Dash Bio for R]
[https://moderndata.plot.ly/introducing-dash-bio-for-r/ Introducing Dash Bio for R]


= shinytheme =
= Theme =
[https://blog.rstudio.org/2016/10/13/shinythemes-1-1-1/ shinythemes 1.1.1]


= bootstraplib =
== shinytheme ==
* [https://blog.rstudio.org/2016/10/13/shinythemes-1-1-1/ shinythemes 1.1.1]
* [https://medium.com/@PedroLinsMMC/build-your-own-interactive-data-driven-web-app-a-step-by-step-guide-2485c7b2a9bd Build Your Own Interactive Data-Driven Web App: A Step-by-Step Guide]
 
== bslib ==
[https://appsilon.com/r-shiny-bslib/ R Shiny bslib – How to Work With Bootstrap Themes in Shiny]
 
== bootstraplib ==
[https://www.programmingwithr.com/how-to-use-bootstraplib-s-live-theme-previewer-to-customize-shiny-apps/ How to use bootstraplib's Live Theme Previewer to customize Shiny apps?]
[https://www.programmingwithr.com/how-to-use-bootstraplib-s-live-theme-previewer-to-customize-shiny-apps/ How to use bootstraplib's Live Theme Previewer to customize Shiny apps?]


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= Gallery =
= Gallery =
* https://github.com/rstudio/shiny-examples
<pre>
git clone https://github.com/rstudio/shiny-examples.git
shiny::runApp("~/github/shiny-examples/018-datatable-options/")
</pre>
* [https://www.rstudio.com/products/shiny/shiny-user-showcase/ Shiny User Showcase]
* [https://www.rstudio.com/products/shiny/shiny-user-showcase/ Shiny User Showcase]
* [https://blog.rstudio.com/2021/02/12/shiny-app-stories/ Introducing Shiny App Stories]
* [https://blog.rstudio.com/2021/02/12/shiny-app-stories/ Introducing Shiny App Stories]
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* interactiveDisplay (Bioconductor package, there is a STOP Application button too): http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/interactiveDisplay.html
* interactiveDisplay (Bioconductor package, there is a STOP Application button too): http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/interactiveDisplay.html
* [https://ellisp.shinyapps.io/nzes2014_x_by_party/ Party vote characteristics at the New Zealand General Election 2014], [http://ellisp.github.io/blog/2017/08/20/nzes-so-far More things with the New Zealand Election Study]
* [https://ellisp.shinyapps.io/nzes2014_x_by_party/ Party vote characteristics at the New Zealand General Election 2014], [http://ellisp.github.io/blog/2017/08/20/nzes-so-far More things with the New Zealand Election Study]
* [http://www.biosoft.hacettepe.edu.tr/geneSurv/ genSurv] : An interactive web-based tool for survival analysis in genomics research. The [http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S001048251730286X paper] and the [https://github.com/selcukorkmaz/geneSurv source] code.
* [http://www.biosoft.hacettepe.edu.tr/geneSurv/ geneSurv] : An interactive web-based tool for survival analysis in genomics research. The [http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S001048251730286X paper] and the [https://github.com/selcukorkmaz/geneSurv source] code.
* [https://www.biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/09/21/192005.1 gene2drug]
* [https://www.biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/09/21/192005.1 gene2drug]
* Stock
* Stock
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= Persistent data storage in Shiny apps =
= Persistent data storage in Shiny apps =
http://deanattali.com/blog/shiny-persistent-data-storage/
http://deanattali.com/blog/shiny-persistent-data-storage/
= multiple outputs to mainPanel =
https://stackoverflow.com/a/27383312. Or use fluidRow() to expand the output in one tabPanel.
<pre>
ui <- navbarPage("My App",
  tabPanel("Lasso",
    sidebarLayout(
      sidebarPanel(
        ...
      ),
      mainPanel(
        tabsetPanel(
          tabPanel("CV plot", plotOutput("plotLasso")),
          tabPanel("Lasso fitting",
                  #verbatimTextOutput("fitLasso"))
                  fluidRow(
                      column(12, TextOutput("fitLasso", inline=T)),
                      column(12, verbatimTextOutput("fitLasso2"))
                  ))
        )
      ) # close mainPanel
  ) # close sidebarLayout
  ), # close tabPanel Lasso
)  #close navbar page
server <- function(input, output, session) {
  output$fitLasso <- renderText({ })
  output$fitLasso2 <- renderPrint({ })
}
shinyApp(ui, server)
</pre>
= navbarPage =
[https://stackoverflow.com/questions/57890541/how-to-get-the-selected-tab-id-in-a-navbarpage-with-modules How to get the selected Tab-ID in a navbarPage with modules]
= HTML =
<ul>
<li>[https://shiny.rstudio.com/articles/html-tags.html Customize your UI with HTML]
<pre>
# adding the new div tag to the sidebar           
      tags$div(class="header", checked=NA,
              tags$p("Ready to take the Shiny tutorial? If so"),
              tags$a(href="shiny.rstudio.com/tutorial", "Click Here!")
</pre>
<li>[https://shiny.rstudio.com/articles/html-ui.html Build your entire UI with HTML]. ''This seems to be a more complicated approach'' at first glance.
<pre>
<application-dir>
|-- app.R
|-- www
    |-- index.html
</pre>
and "app.R"
<pre>
# ui is defined in the HTML file
server <- function(input, output) { }
shinyApp(ui = htmlTemplate("www/index.html"), server)
</pre>
<li>[https://shiny.rstudio.com/articles/templates.html HTML templates]
<li>[https://shiny.rstudio.com/articles/tag-glossary.html Shiny HTML Tags Glossary]
</ul>


= Conditional input =
= Conditional input =
* [https://shiny.rstudio.com/reference/shiny/latest/conditionalPanel.html conditionalPanel()], [https://shiny.rstudio.com/reference/shiny/latest/selectInput.html selectInput()]
* [https://shiny.rstudio.com/reference/shiny/latest/conditionalPanel.html conditionalPanel()], [https://shiny.rstudio.com/reference/shiny/latest/selectInput.html selectInput()]
* [https://stackoverflow.com/questions/41468333/checkboxinput-and-conditionalpanel-in-shiny checkboxInput and conditionalPanel in shiny]
* [https://stackoverflow.com/questions/41468333/checkboxinput-and-conditionalpanel-in-shiny checkboxInput and conditionalPanel in shiny]
= Upload a file/files =
* https://shiny.rstudio.com/articles/upload.html. fileInput(), renderTable(), tableOutput(). Add ''options(shiny.maxRequestSize = 30*1024^2)'' to increase the upload size to eg 30MB.
* [https://youtu.be/Qfdd73ICDiA how to upload and access multiple CSV files in R Shiny], [https://github.com/aagarw30/R-Shinyapp-Tutorial/tree/master/Fileinput_uploadmultiplefiles source code]. renderTable(), renderPrint(), renderUI().
* [https://youtu.be/qdnALNvYIYo demo upload a zip file and unzip it to local machine]. [https://github.com/aagarw30/R-Shinyapp-Tutorial/tree/master/fileinput_uploadzip_file Source code]. observeEvent()
* [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5580407/ CASAS: Cancer Survival Analysis Suite, a web based application]
* [https://github.com/rstudio/shiny/issues/3596 fileInput "accept" not filtering options]. The RStudio built in web browser does not use the accept attribute. It will always show "All Files (*)" if you view your shiny app through RStudio. The '''RStudio built in web browser''' does not use the accept attribute. It will always show "All Files (*)" if you view your shiny app through RStudio.
= reactive =
* [https://shiny.rstudio.com/tutorial/written-tutorial/lesson4/ Lesson 4 Display reactive output]
* [https://shiny.rstudio.com/articles/reactivity-overview.html Reactivity - An overview]
* [https://shiny.rstudio.com/reference/shiny/latest/reactive.html ?reactive], [https://shiny.rstudio.com/tutorial/written-tutorial/lesson6/ Lesson 6 Use reactive expressions]
* [https://mastering-shiny.org/basic-reactivity.html 3 Basic reactivity] from '''Mastering Shiny'''
* [https://turtletopia.github.io/2022/08/31/shiny-reactivity-tricks-pt-ii-reactives-factories/ Shiny Reactivity Tricks, pt. II: Reactives Factories]
= actionButton and isolate =
* https://shiny.rstudio.com/articles/isolation.html
* [https://gallery.shinyapps.io/049-isolate-demo/ 049-isolate-demo]
* It seems isolate() will always run the code one time. So consider '''eventReactive()''' or '''observeEvent()''' instead.
== actionButton and eventReactive* ==
[https://youtu.be/40hr8oF_a0E?t=181 R Shiny App Tutorial | eventReactive() demo | Create dependency on actionButton]
== actionButton, observeEvent and reactiveValues ==
<ul>
<li>[https://shiny.rstudio.com/reference/shiny/0.11/reactiveValues.html ?reactiveValues]
<li>Based on the following 2 examples. It seems
* reactiveValues() and observeEvent() work together.
* reactiveValues() will create a global variable and its value will be changed based on an actionButton.
* the effect of '''observeEvent() + reactiveValues()''' is similar to '''eventReactive()''' if we don't consider the situation that the new value depends on the old value.
<li>[https://riptutorial.com/shiny/example/32342/reactivevalues reactiveValues example]
<pre>
text_reactive <- reactiveValues(
    text = "No text has been submitted yet."
)
observeEvent(input$submit, {
    text_reactive$text <- input$user_text
})
output$text <- renderText({
    text_reactive$text
})
</pre>
eventReactive() way:
<pre>
text <- eventReactive(input$submit, {
        input$user_text
})
output$text <- renderText({
  text()
})
</pre>
<li>[https://youtu.be/ML54auObmL8 reactiveValues() in R Shiny - Example 1 - A counter] (video)
<pre>
counter <- reactiveValues(countervalue = 0)
observeEvent(input$add1,
    counter$countervalue <- counter$countervalue + 1
output$counter <- renderText({
    counter$countervalue
})
</pre>
The following code will break (Error in : C stack usage  7969216 is too close to the limit). So this is the case eventReactive() can't replace reactiveValues()!
<pre>
countervalue <- eventReactive(input$add1, {
          countervalue() + 1
})
output$counter <- renderText({
    countervalue()
})
</pre>
</ul>
= Dynamic UI =
* [https://shiny.rstudio.com/articles/dynamic-ui.html Build a dynamic UI that reacts to user input]. reactive(), observeEvent()
** http://wch.github.io/shiny/tutorial/#dynamic-ui
* [https://shiny.rstudio.com/gallery/dynamic-ui.html Dynamically generated user interface components]
* [https://towardsdatascience.com/dynamic-ui-in-shiny-incl-demo-app-a6fb791be4c6 Dynamic UI in Shiny (incl. demo app)] complicated!
* Youtube
** [https://youtu.be/JUop-YfRAuw R Shiny app tutorial # 13 a - how to use renderUI() and uiOutput() in shiny - Dynamic input widgets]
** [https://youtu.be/mHRVFMQ54ZE (R Shiny Basic App) #8 Dynamically create Drop Down List] source code in [https://github.com/KunaalNaik/YT_R_Shiny_Dashboards/tree/master/1%20Basic%20App github]. Code is short. reactive(), observe(), [https://shiny.rstudio.com/reference/shiny/latest/selectInput.html selectInput()], updateSelectInput().
== eventReactive() ==
<ul>
<li>[https://gallery.shinyapps.io/028-actionbutton-demo/ 028-actionbutton-demo] actionButton() and eventReactive()
<li>[https://shiny.rstudio.com/articles/action-buttons.html Using Action and Reset Buttons] actionButton(), reactiveValues(), observeEvent() and eventReactive()
<li>https://shiny.rstudio.com/reference/shiny/1.0.3/observeEvent.html
<li>[https://mastering-shiny.org/reactivity-objects.html observeEvent() and eventReactive()] from Mastering Shiny
<li>[https://stackoverflow.com/a/33520706 Shiny: what is the difference between observeEvent and eventReactive?]
* '''eventReactive'''(eventExpr, handlerExpr, ...) creates a reactive value that changes based on the eventExpr. It seems we do not care much about the returned value. ''handleExpr'' is like output$SOMETHING.
* '''observeEvent'''(eventExpr, valueExpr, ...) simply is triggered based on eventExpr. It returns a reactive expression object.
</li>
</ul>


= Files =
= Files =
Line 318: Line 605:
= Install all required R packages =
= Install all required R packages =
http://padamson.github.io/r/shiny/2016/03/13/install-required-r-packages.html
http://padamson.github.io/r/shiny/2016/03/13/install-required-r-packages.html
= Icons =
<ul>
<li>[https://appsilon.com/r-shiny-fontawesome-icons/ R Shiny & FontAwesome Icons – How to Use Them in Your Dashboards]
<li>[https://community.rstudio.com/t/image-not-showing-r-shiny-displayed-as-broken/102750 Image not showing R Shiny (displayed as broken)]
* Put the png file in the '''www''' directory
* Put your R code in the app.R file and run it through runApp() or the '''Run App''' icon in RStudio. It does not work if we call it by shinyApp() function.
<li>Example
<syntaxhighlight lang='r'>
library(shiny)
library(survival)
ui <- fluidPage(
  titlePanel(
      title = tags$div(tags$img(src = "icon.png", height = "32px", width = "32px"),
                      "Interactive Kaplan Meier Plot",
                      style = "background-color: black; color: white; padding: 10px;")),
  sidebarLayout(
      sidebarPanel(
        radioButtons("survivalType", "Choose survival data type:",
                      choices = list("Overall Survival" = "os", "Progression Free Survival" = "pfs"),
                      selected = "os")
      ),
      mainPanel(
        plotOutput("kmPlot")
      )
  )
)
</syntaxhighlight>
</ul>
= How do I add a favicon to my Shiny app =
Adding a favicon to your Shiny app can be done by placing the favicon file in the www directory of your Shiny app and then using the tags$link function in your UI to link to it. Here’s how you can do it:
<ol>
<li>Place your favicon file (e.g., favicon.ico) in the www directory of your Shiny app.
<li>In your UI, add the following line inside the fluidPage or navbarPage function:
<pre>
tags$head(tags$link(rel = "shortcut icon", href = "favicon.ico", type = "image/x-icon"))
</pre>
<li>Here’s an example of how it might look in a Shiny app:
<pre>
ui <- fluidPage(
  titlePanel("My Shiny App"),
  tags$head(tags$link(rel = "shortcut icon", href = "favicon.ico", type = "image/x-icon")),
  # Rest of your UI code...
)
server <- function(input, output) {
  # Your server code...
}
shinyApp(ui = ui, server = server)
</pre>
</ol>
Websites to convert an image to a favicon:
* https://www.favicon-generator.org/
* https://favicon.io/
* https://www.favicongenerator.com/


= Building a Shiny App as a Package =
= Building a Shiny App as a Package =
Line 337: Line 684:
* [https://glin.github.io/reactable/index.html reactable]
* [https://glin.github.io/reactable/index.html reactable]
** [https://www.infoworld.com/article/3543297/how-to-create-tables-in-r-with-expandable-rows.html How to create tables in R with expandable rows]
** [https://www.infoworld.com/article/3543297/how-to-create-tables-in-r-with-expandable-rows.html How to create tables in R with expandable rows]
= Multimedia =
[https://ashbaldry.github.io/2022-07-20-shiny-multimedia/ Shiny and Reactive Multimedia]


= Math formula =
= Math formula =
Line 369: Line 719:
= Tips =
= Tips =
[http://deanattali.com/blog/advanced-shiny-tips/ Shiny tips & tricks for improving your apps and solving common problems] by Dean Attali.
[http://deanattali.com/blog/advanced-shiny-tips/ Shiny tips & tricks for improving your apps and solving common problems] by Dean Attali.
== Adding a website ==
[https://www.r-bloggers.com/2023/09/adding-a-website-next-to-your-shiny-server/ Adding a website next to your Shiny server]
== A Guide to Benchmarking Memory Usage ==
[https://www.r-bloggers.com/2023/11/maximizing-efficiency-a-guide-to-benchmarking-memory-usage-in-shiny-apps/ Maximizing Efficiency: A Guide to Benchmarking Memory Usage in Shiny Apps]


= Recreating a Shiny App with Flask =
= Recreating a Shiny App with Flask =
[https://www.jumpingrivers.com/blog/r-shiny-python-flask/ Recreating a Shiny App with Flask]
[https://www.jumpingrivers.com/blog/r-shiny-python-flask/ Recreating a Shiny App with Flask]
== Webhook ==
Flask, a popular web framework.
This example assumes that you have a server running at https://yourserver.com/webhook that is set up to receive POST requests.
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
from flask import Flask, request
app = Flask(__name__)
@app.route('/webhook', methods=['POST'])
def respond():
    print(request.json)
    return {'status': 'success'}, 200
if __name__ == '__main__':
    app.run(port=5000, debug=True)
</syntaxhighlight>
In this example, whenever a POST request is made to https://yourserver.com/webhook, the respond function is triggered. This function prints the JSON payload of the request and returns a success status. The JSON payload is the data sent by the application that triggered the webhook. This could be any data related to the event that occurred in the other application. For instance, if the webhook was triggered by a new user signing up, the JSON payload might contain the new user’s details.
You can use the curl command to send a POST request to your local server. Here’s an example:
{{Pre}}
curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d '{"key":"value"}' http://localhost:5000/webhook
</pre>


= Modularize your shiny apps =
= Modularize your shiny apps =
Line 379: Line 758:


= [http://withr.me/a-shiny-app-serves-as-shiny-server-load-balancer/ A Shiny-app Serves as Shiny-server Load Balancer] =
= [http://withr.me/a-shiny-app-serves-as-shiny-server-load-balancer/ A Shiny-app Serves as Shiny-server Load Balancer] =
== ggtips: adding tooltips boxes to ggplots ==
[https://github.com/Roche/ggtips Adds interactive tooltip boxes to ggplots (standalone or rendered in Shiny)]


= [https://github.com/rstudio/shinyloadtest Shinyloadtest] tools for load testing Shiny applications =
= [https://github.com/rstudio/shinyloadtest Shinyloadtest] tools for load testing Shiny applications =
Line 389: Line 771:
= Build a static website with R Shiny =
= Build a static website with R Shiny =
[https://www.gl-li.com/2020/04/13/build-static-website-with-r-shiny/  Build a static website with R Shiny]
[https://www.gl-li.com/2020/04/13/build-static-website-with-r-shiny/  Build a static website with R Shiny]
= Embed a shiny app on your website =
* https://support.rstudio.com/hc/en-us/articles/217592607-Can-I-embed-shiny-apps-in-other-websites-e-g-iFrames-
* [https://datasciencegenie.com/how-to-embed-a-shiny-app-on-website/ How to embed a Shiny App on Website]
* See this example [https://datavoreconsulting.com/post/interactive-visualization-survival-curves-shiny/ Interactive visualization of survival curves with Shiny] where it use '''iframe''' to embed a shiny app hosted on shinyapps.io.
<iframe width="750" height="650" scrolling="no" frameborder="no" src="https://hinkelman.shinyapps.io/shiny-survival-covariate/">
</iframe>


= Machine learning examples =
= Machine learning examples =
Line 395: Line 785:
= Real Shiny Examples =
= Real Shiny Examples =
* [https://discover.nci.nih.gov/cellminercdb/ CellMinerDB] from NCI/NIH.
* [https://discover.nci.nih.gov/cellminercdb/ CellMinerDB] from NCI/NIH.
* [https://github.com/openbiox/UCSCXenaShiny UCSCXenaShiny]
* [http://www.biosoft.hacettepe.edu.tr/voomDDA/ voomDDA]: Discovery of Diagnostic Biomarkers and Classification of RNA-Seq Data. https://peerj.com/articles/3890/
* [http://www.biosoft.hacettepe.edu.tr/voomDDA/ voomDDA]: Discovery of Diagnostic Biomarkers and Classification of RNA-Seq Data. https://peerj.com/articles/3890/
* [https://github.com/fbreitwieser/pavian Interactive analysis of metagenomics data]
* [https://github.com/fbreitwieser/pavian Interactive analysis of metagenomics data]
Line 402: Line 793:
* Essential guidelines for computational method benchmarking [https://genomebiology.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13059-019-1738-8 paper]
* Essential guidelines for computational method benchmarking [https://genomebiology.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13059-019-1738-8 paper]
* [https://www.rna-seqblog.com/bisr-rnaseq-an-efficient-and-scalable-rnaseq-analysis-workflow-with-interactive-report-generation/ BISR-RNAseq] – an efficient and scalable RNAseq analysis workflow with interactive report generation
* [https://www.rna-seqblog.com/bisr-rnaseq-an-efficient-and-scalable-rnaseq-analysis-workflow-with-interactive-report-generation/ BISR-RNAseq] – an efficient and scalable RNAseq analysis workflow with interactive report generation
* [https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-023-05420-y ROGUE: an R Shiny app for RNA sequencing analysis and biomarker discovery] 2023
* [https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-020-03577-4 NASQAR]: a web-based platform for high-throughput sequencing data analysis and visualization. 2020
* [https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-020-03577-4 NASQAR]: a web-based platform for high-throughput sequencing data analysis and visualization. 2020
* [https://oncogenomics.bmc.lu.se/MutationExplorer/ MutationExplorer] (sloww) and [https://github.com/cbrueffer/MutationExplorer Source]
* [https://oncogenomics.bmc.lu.se/MutationExplorer/ MutationExplorer] (sloww) and [https://github.com/cbrueffer/MutationExplorer Source]
Line 411: Line 803:
* [https://github.com/jamesdalg/CNVScope cnvscope.nci.nih.gov]
* [https://github.com/jamesdalg/CNVScope cnvscope.nci.nih.gov]
* [https://appsilon.com/r-shiny-in-life-sciences-examples/ R Shiny in Life Sciences – Top 7 Dashboard Examples]
* [https://appsilon.com/r-shiny-in-life-sciences-examples/ R Shiny in Life Sciences – Top 7 Dashboard Examples]
* [https://appsilon.com/r-shiny-in-government-examples/ R Shiny in Government – Top 7 Dashboards You Should See]
* [https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-022-04641-x classifieR a flexible interactive cloud-application for functional annotation of cancer transcriptomes]
* [https://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/BatchQC.html BatchQC] package. Batch Effects Quality Control Software. That's why the vignettes do not show any text/plots output. However, an HTML report and other files are created automatically in the working directory.
* [http://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/TCGAbiolinksGUI.html TCGAbiolinksGUI]: A Graphical User Interface to analyze cancer molecular and clinical data (got some error when calling TCGAbiolinksGUI()). [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/vignettes/TCGAbiolinks/inst/doc/gui.html#Setting_up_image_using_command-line Docker image] with instruction (works fine 8GB image, access via http://URL:3334).
** The web interface allows us to download the data and then upload it (from the docker machine) to the portal  for data analysis. Very nice!
** After uploading the data, the screen flashed many times? It should has a feedback to show the first few rows of the data.
** Strangely even the downloaded csv file has required column names (days_to_death, days_to_last_follow_up, vital_status) for the analysis tool (the survival plot), I still got an error. ''An error has occurred. Check your logs or contact the app author for clarification.''
** No any error messages in the docker log.
** It seems the performance & reliability is an issue.
* [https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-023-05221-3 LACE 2.0]: an interactive R tool for the inference and visualization of longitudinal cancer evolution 2023
* [https://github.com/SomaLogic/ProViz ProViz] ProViz imports an ADAT file (SomaLogic's data file format) and allows users to perform various exploratory data analytic processes.


= Interesting Examples =
= Interesting Examples =
Line 416: Line 819:
* [https://medium.com/@zappingseb/very-shiny-holidays-5ee316fc7f84 Very shiny holidays!]  Shiny + JQuery + CSS.
* [https://medium.com/@zappingseb/very-shiny-holidays-5ee316fc7f84 Very shiny holidays!]  Shiny + JQuery + CSS.
* [http://www.datasurg.net/2018/12/07/shinyfit-advanced-regression-modelling-in-a-shiny-app/ Shinyfit: Advanced regression modelling in a shiny app]
* [http://www.datasurg.net/2018/12/07/shinyfit-advanced-regression-modelling-in-a-shiny-app/ Shinyfit: Advanced regression modelling in a shiny app]
* [https://github.com/leandrosev/Probability_Calculator_ShinyApp Probability Calculator App]
* [https://blog.rsquaredacademy.com/introducting-vistributions/ Visually explore Probability Distributions with vistributions]
* [https://blog.rsquaredacademy.com/introducting-vistributions/ Visually explore Probability Distributions with vistributions]
* https://github.com/hadley/cran-downloads <syntaxhighlight lang='rsplus'>
* https://github.com/hadley/cran-downloads <syntaxhighlight lang='rsplus'>
Line 442: Line 846:
* [https://blog.rstudio.com/2020/07/13/winners-of-the-2nd-shiny-contest/ Hangman] from 2nd Annual Shiny Contest.
* [https://blog.rstudio.com/2020/07/13/winners-of-the-2nd-shiny-contest/ Hangman] from 2nd Annual Shiny Contest.
* [https://statisticaloddsandends.wordpress.com/2020/12/22/a-shiny-app-for-exploratory-data-analysis/ A shiny app for exploratory data analysis]
* [https://statisticaloddsandends.wordpress.com/2020/12/22/a-shiny-app-for-exploratory-data-analysis/ A shiny app for exploratory data analysis]
* [https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2023.06.09.544161v1 PlotS]: web-based application for data visualization and analysis
* [https://c4tb.github.io/shinyExprPortal/ shinyExprPortal]. Deploy interactive Shiny portals for exploration and showcase of analysis of molecular expression and phenotype data using a configuration file.
* Games
** [https://pacha.dev/blog/2024/05/10/index.html If Doom runs everywhere, it must run on Shiny]


= Scaling =
= Scaling =

Latest revision as of 12:02, 18 October 2024

Preliminary

The following is what we see on a browser after we run an example from shiny package. See http://rstudio.github.com/shiny/tutorial/#hello-shiny. Note that the R session needs to be on; i.e. R command prompt will not be returned unless we press Ctrl+C or ESC.

ShinyHello.png Shinympg.png ShinyReactivity.png ShinyTabsets.png ShinyUpload.png

More shiny examples can be found on https://github.com/rstudio/shiny-examples 188 shiny-examples (note this is not what runExample("08_html") used. runExample() used local files that contain only 11 examples). The local directory is /Library/Frameworks/R.framework/Versions/4.2/Resources/library/shiny/ for R 4.2.x on macOS.

shiny depends on websockets, caTools, bitops, digest packages.

Q & A:

  • Tutorial: http://wch.github.io/shiny/tutorial/
  • Layout: http://shiny.rstudio.com/articles/layout-guide.html
  • Q: If we run runExample('01_hello') in Rserve from an R client, we can continue our work in R client without losing the functionality of the GUI from shiny. Question: how do we kill the job?
  • If I run the example "01_hello", the browser only shows the control but not graph on Firefox? A: Use Chrome or Opera as the default browser.
  • Q: How difficult to put the code in Gist:github? A: Just create an account. Do not even need to create a repository. Just go to http://gist.github.com and create a new gist. The new gist can be secret or public. A secret gist can not be edited again after it is created although it works fine when it was used in runGist() function.

Resources

Deploy to run locally

Run Shiny Apps Locally 2021

Follow the instruction here, we can do as following (Tested on Windows OS)

  1. Create a desktop shortcut with target "C:\Program Files\R\R-3.0.2\bin\R.exe" -e "shiny::runExample('01_hello')" . We can name the shortcut as we like, e.g. R+shiny
  2. Double click the shortcut. The Windows Firewall will be popped up and say it block some features of the program. It does not matter if we choose Allow access or Cancel.
  3. Look at the command prompt window (black background console window), it will say something like
    Listening on port 7510
    at the last line of the console.
  4. Open your browser (Chrome or Firefox works), and type the address http://localhost:7510. You will see something magic happen.
  5. If we don't want to play with it, we can close the browser and close the command console (hit 'x')too.

How to run an R shiny app

rmarkdown::run() instead of rmarkdown::render()

Use rmarkdown::run("XXX.Rmd") file. If you use the render() function, you will receive an error "Error: path for html_dependency not provided Execution".

RInno

Installs shiny apps packaged as stand-alone Electron apps using Inno Setup, an open source software that builds installers for Windows programs only.

Deploy on cloud

https://www.r-bloggers.com/deploying-r-rstudio-and-shiny-applications-on-unbuntu-server/

Shiny server series part 1: setting up. It includes setting up A- and CNAME records on DigitalOcean.

Deploy on Github Pages: shinylive

Deploy to Digital Ocean

How to deploy Shiny application to Digital Ocean using GitHub Actions

Deploy on shinyapps.io: rsconnect package

About the account

Shinyapps.io can accept google account to sign up.

Note:

  1. Default System Packages.
  2. Two commands are needed to upload an app:
    • rsconnect::setAccountInfo() [the full command is copied from account's token page.
    • rsconnect::deployApp() [assume we are in the right working directory]. If the machine contains several accounts, we can use deployApp(account = "XXXX") to specify the account we want to deploy the app. After successful deployment, the browser will open the URL for our app.
  3. After we run rsconnect() command to deploy our apps, a new subfolder rsconnect will be created under our app folder. I add this folder to .gitignore file. But it seems this file/folder does not contain any secret information. So not worry.
  4. The rsconnect stores account information. If we get the app from another account make sure to delete this subfolder before we run rsconnect::deployApp(); otherwise we will get an error message Error: HTTP 403 .... Forbidden'; see I can't deploy my app with a name that was used in a previous deleted app.
  5. For the shiny apps we uploaded to shinyapps.io, we can download them back. The download bundle will also include packrat subfolder (packrat.lock file and desc subfolder). See R packages → packrat for more about packrat.

Caveats:

  1. I cannot upload my shiny app shinySurvival when it contains data in a subdirectory.
  2. When the app is running perfectly locally, it gives some errors when it is deployed to the shinyapps.io. Looking at the app log does not help too much.

deployApp()

  • Choose which files ignored deploy to shinyapps.io. See Deploy to Shinyapps.io from Github Actions
    deployApp(, appFiles= c("app.R" #, you can specify which files to deploy, 
                                     #or keep this NULL to deploy everything
                             ),
              appName = error_on_missing_name("MASTERNAME"),
              appTitle = "shinyapplication")
    

Packages

  • The R packages our shiny app uses will be automatically downloaded by shinyapps.io service. See the package dependencies section on http://shiny.rstudio.com/articles/shinyapps.html and Using your R packages in the cloud.
  • When you deploy your application, the rsconnect package detects the packages that your application uses by looking for explicit library() calls within your application. Be aware that you should not have an explicit install.packages() call within your ui.R or server.R files.
  • Currently the shinyapps.io service supports deploying packages installed from CRAN, GitHub, and BioConductor.
  • rsconnect::appDependencies() - Recursively detect all package dependencies for an application.
  • Error when trying to deploy to shinyapps.io: Application depends on package "package" but it is not. You have to fool the shinyapps (or rsconnect) package a bit so that it does not detect package as a literal package name.
    do.call(library, list(package = package, character.only = TRUE))
    
  • How to specify package versions when deploying Shiny app to shinyapps.io? See the next item.
  • Shiny app which depends on package on GitHub? You should not install packages inside your shiny app, just install it locally and rsconnect will figure out how to install it based on your local library, you just have to load the library inside your app. Remember packageDescription() records all information even a package installed from a specific commit from Github repository.
  • (Is this outdated?) In order for BioConductor packages to install succesfully on shinyapps.io, the repos option must be configured, either directly or by using setRepositories(), to include the BioConductor repositories in addition to CRAN. setRepositories()
    setRepositories(addURLs = c(BioC = "https://bioconductor.org/packages/3.8/bioc"))
    
  • Deploy shiny app using custom package. Also use renv or packrat package.
  • How to manage R package dependencies for shiny app deployment (docker) packrat
  • Deploying packrat projects to Shiny Server Pro packrat
  • Building Web Apps with R Shiny ebook
  • Deploy to Shinyapps.io from Github Actions

Deploying a development version of a shiny app

rsconnect::deployApp(..., appName="MyApp")
rsconnect::deployApp(..., appName="MyApp_dev")

Shiny server installation

Each app directory needs to be copied to /srv/shiny-server/ (which links to /opt/shiny-server/) directory using sudo.

The default port is 3838. That is, the remote computer can access the website using http://xxx.xxx.x.xx:3838/AppName.

Release

Shiny Server 1.5.16 Update 2021-01-03

Ubuntu & firewall

RHEL/CentOS 7

https://www.vultr.com/docs/how-to-install-shiny-server-on-centos-7

Raspberry Pi

R

sudo nano /etc/apt/sources.list
# deb http://archive.raspbian.org/raspbian/ stretch main 

sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install r-base r-base-core r-base-dev

Shiny-server

sudo apt-get install cmake

sudo su - -c "R -e \"install.packages('shiny', repos='http://cran.rstudio.com/')\"" 

git clone https://github.com/rstudio/shiny-server.git
cd shiny-server
mkdir tmp
cd tmp
DIR=`pwd`
PATH=$DIR/../bin:$PATH

PYTHON=`which python`
$PYTHON --version

cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr/local -DPYTHON="$PYTHON" ../

make
mkdir ../build
(cd .. && ./bin/npm --python="$PYTHON" install)
(cd .. && ./bin/node ./ext/node/lib/node_modules/npm/node_modules/node-gyp/bin/node-gyp.js --python="$PYTHON" rebuild)

sudo make install

sudo ln -s /usr/local/shiny-server/bin/shiny-server /usr/bin/shiny-server

sudo useradd -r -m shiny

sudo mkdir -p /var/log/shiny-server
sudo mkdir -p /srv/shiny-server
sudo mkdir -p /var/lib/shiny-server
sudo chown shiny /var/log/shiny-server
sudo mkdir -p /etc/shiny-server

cd /etc/shiny-server/
sudo wget http://withr.me/misc/shiny-server.conf

sudo shiny-server

http://192.168.X.XXX:3838

建立 server.R 及 ui.R 程式

cd /srv/shiny-server
mkdir hello_shiny
cd hello_shiny
# 分別建立 server.R 及 ui.R

Running shiny server as non-root: run_as

Google analytics

https://docs.rstudio.com/shiny-server/#google-analytics

Reverse proxy: Deploy your own shiny server

Shiny https: Securing Shiny Open Source with SSL

Securing Shiny Server with Caddy

Shiny for Python

https://shiny.rstudio.com/py/

Shiny Assistant

Simplifying Parts Of A Shiny App by Creating Functions

Simplifying Parts Of A Shiny App by Creating Functions

shinyuieditor

shinyuieditor package

Shiny UI Prototype Builder

designer package

How to Build a Data Analysis App in R Shiny

How to Build a Data Analysis App in R Shiny

Landing page

The R Shiny packages you need for your web apps

https://www.r-bloggers.com/2017/07/the-r-shiny-packages-you-need-for-your-web-apps/

Other web apps

Ten simple rules for researchers who want to develop web apps

Shiny + Docker

Dashboard

shinydashboard

flexdashboard

shinyalert: create pretty popup messages (modals) in Shiny

shinyalert

shinyjs

shinyjs

Dash bio for R

Introducing Dash Bio for R

Theme

shinytheme

bslib

R Shiny bslib – How to Work With Bootstrap Themes in Shiny

bootstraplib

How to use bootstraplib's Live Theme Previewer to customize Shiny apps?

shiny + databases

tags, hyperlinks

dates

websocket

CentOS

Gallery

git clone https://github.com/rstudio/shiny-examples.git
shiny::runApp("~/github/shiny-examples/018-datatable-options/")

Persistent data storage in Shiny apps

http://deanattali.com/blog/shiny-persistent-data-storage/

multiple outputs to mainPanel

https://stackoverflow.com/a/27383312. Or use fluidRow() to expand the output in one tabPanel.

ui <- navbarPage("My App",
  tabPanel("Lasso",
     sidebarLayout(
       sidebarPanel(
         ...
       ),

       mainPanel(
         tabsetPanel(
          tabPanel("CV plot", plotOutput("plotLasso")),
          tabPanel("Lasso fitting", 
                   #verbatimTextOutput("fitLasso"))
                   fluidRow(
                      column(12, TextOutput("fitLasso", inline=T)),
                      column(12, verbatimTextOutput("fitLasso2"))
                   ))
         )
       ) # close mainPanel
   ) # close sidebarLayout
  ), # close tabPanel Lasso
)  #close navbar page

server <- function(input, output, session) {
  output$fitLasso <- renderText({ })
  output$fitLasso2 <- renderPrint({ })
}

shinyApp(ui, server)

navbarPage

How to get the selected Tab-ID in a navbarPage with modules

HTML

  • Customize your UI with HTML
    # adding the new div tag to the sidebar            
          tags$div(class="header", checked=NA,
                   tags$p("Ready to take the Shiny tutorial? If so"),
                   tags$a(href="shiny.rstudio.com/tutorial", "Click Here!")
    
  • Build your entire UI with HTML. This seems to be a more complicated approach at first glance.
    <application-dir>
    |-- app.R
    |-- www
        |-- index.html
    

    and "app.R"

    # ui is defined in the HTML file
    
    server <- function(input, output) { }
    
    shinyApp(ui = htmlTemplate("www/index.html"), server)
    
  • HTML templates
  • Shiny HTML Tags Glossary

Conditional input

Upload a file/files

reactive

actionButton and isolate

actionButton and eventReactive*

R Shiny App Tutorial | eventReactive() demo | Create dependency on actionButton

actionButton, observeEvent and reactiveValues

  • ?reactiveValues
  • Based on the following 2 examples. It seems
    • reactiveValues() and observeEvent() work together.
    • reactiveValues() will create a global variable and its value will be changed based on an actionButton.
    • the effect of observeEvent() + reactiveValues() is similar to eventReactive() if we don't consider the situation that the new value depends on the old value.
  • reactiveValues example
    text_reactive <- reactiveValues(
        text = "No text has been submitted yet."
    )
    
    observeEvent(input$submit, {
        text_reactive$text <- input$user_text
    })
    
    output$text <- renderText({
        text_reactive$text
    })
    

    eventReactive() way:

    text <- eventReactive(input$submit, {
            input$user_text
    })
    output$text <- renderText({
      text()
    })
    
  • reactiveValues() in R Shiny - Example 1 - A counter (video)
    counter <- reactiveValues(countervalue = 0)
    
    observeEvent(input$add1, 
        counter$countervalue <- counter$countervalue + 1
    
    output$counter <- renderText({
        counter$countervalue 
    })
    

    The following code will break (Error in : C stack usage 7969216 is too close to the limit). So this is the case eventReactive() can't replace reactiveValues()!

    countervalue <- eventReactive(input$add1, {
               countervalue() + 1
    })
    output$counter <- renderText({
        countervalue()
    })
    

Dynamic UI

eventReactive()

Files

shinyFiles

shinyFiles package. This package extends the functionality of shiny by providing an API for client side access to the server file system. As many shiny apps are run locally this is equivalent to accessing the filesystem of the users own computer, without the overhead of copying files to temporary locations that is tied to the use of fileInput().

Password protection

Install all required R packages

http://padamson.github.io/r/shiny/2016/03/13/install-required-r-packages.html

Icons

  • R Shiny & FontAwesome Icons – How to Use Them in Your Dashboards
  • Image not showing R Shiny (displayed as broken)
    • Put the png file in the www directory
    • Put your R code in the app.R file and run it through runApp() or the Run App icon in RStudio. It does not work if we call it by shinyApp() function.
  • Example
    library(shiny)
    library(survival)
    
    ui <- fluidPage(
       titlePanel(
          title = tags$div(tags$img(src = "icon.png", height = "32px", width = "32px"), 
                           "Interactive Kaplan Meier Plot", 
                           style = "background-color: black; color: white; padding: 10px;")),
       sidebarLayout(
          sidebarPanel(
             radioButtons("survivalType", "Choose survival data type:",
                          choices = list("Overall Survival" = "os", "Progression Free Survival" = "pfs"),
                          selected = "os")
          ),
          mainPanel(
             plotOutput("kmPlot")
          )
       )
    )

How do I add a favicon to my Shiny app

Adding a favicon to your Shiny app can be done by placing the favicon file in the www directory of your Shiny app and then using the tags$link function in your UI to link to it. Here’s how you can do it:

  1. Place your favicon file (e.g., favicon.ico) in the www directory of your Shiny app.
  2. In your UI, add the following line inside the fluidPage or navbarPage function:
    tags$head(tags$link(rel = "shortcut icon", href = "favicon.ico", type = "image/x-icon"))
    
  3. Here’s an example of how it might look in a Shiny app:
    ui <- fluidPage(
       titlePanel("My Shiny App"),
       tags$head(tags$link(rel = "shortcut icon", href = "favicon.ico", type = "image/x-icon")),
       # Rest of your UI code...
    )
    
    server <- function(input, output) {
       # Your server code...
    }
    
    shinyApp(ui = ui, server = server)
    

Websites to convert an image to a favicon:

Building a Shiny App as a Package

Collapsible menu

Three R Shiny tricks to make your Shiny app shines (2/3): Semi-collapsible sidebar

Color picker

https://github.com/daattali/colourpicker

Simulations

Monte Carlo Shiny

Tables

Multimedia

Shiny and Reactive Multimedia

Math formula

shinyMatrix

Tree

shinyTree

D3

Time series

dygraphs

CSS

Debug

Talks

Shiny in production: Principles, practices, and tools - Joe Cheng 2019

Tips

Shiny tips & tricks for improving your apps and solving common problems by Dean Attali.

Adding a website

Adding a website next to your Shiny server

A Guide to Benchmarking Memory Usage

Maximizing Efficiency: A Guide to Benchmarking Memory Usage in Shiny Apps

Recreating a Shiny App with Flask

Recreating a Shiny App with Flask

Webhook

Flask, a popular web framework.

This example assumes that you have a server running at https://yourserver.com/webhook that is set up to receive POST requests.

from flask import Flask, request
app = Flask(__name__)

@app.route('/webhook', methods=['POST'])
def respond():
    print(request.json)
    return {'status': 'success'}, 200

if __name__ == '__main__':
    app.run(port=5000, debug=True)

In this example, whenever a POST request is made to https://yourserver.com/webhook, the respond function is triggered. This function prints the JSON payload of the request and returns a success status. The JSON payload is the data sent by the application that triggered the webhook. This could be any data related to the event that occurred in the other application. For instance, if the webhook was triggered by a new user signing up, the JSON payload might contain the new user’s details.

You can use the curl command to send a POST request to your local server. Here’s an example:

curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d '{"key":"value"}' http://localhost:5000/webhook

Modularize your shiny apps

A Shiny-app Serves as Shiny-server Load Balancer

ggtips: adding tooltips boxes to ggplots

Adds interactive tooltip boxes to ggplots (standalone or rendered in Shiny)

Shinyloadtest tools for load testing Shiny applications

shinytest

New in RStudio 1.2: record and run tests for your Shiny code right inside the IDE with the shinytest package

Shiny-server System Performance Monitoring for Open Source Edition

Build a static website with R Shiny

Build a static website with R Shiny

Embed a shiny app on your website

<iframe width="750" height="650" scrolling="no" frameborder="no" src="https://hinkelman.shinyapps.io/shiny-survival-covariate/"> </iframe>

Machine learning examples

How To Share Your Machine Learning Models With Shiny

Real Shiny Examples

Interesting Examples

Scaling

Long run with Shiny

Track Shiny App User Activity With the RStudio Connect Server =

Track Shiny App User Activity With the RStudio Connect Server API

Standalone application

Photon: Building an Electron-Shiny app using a simple RStudio addin

Mobile

shinyMobile