Book Image

Web Application Development with R Using Shiny - Third Edition

By : Chris Beeley, Shitalkumar R. Sukhdeve
Book Image

Web Application Development with R Using Shiny - Third Edition

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)

Progress bars

It is quite common in Shiny applications, and in analytics generally, to have computations or data-fetches that take a long time. Sometimes, it will be necessary for the user to wait for some time before their output is returned. In cases such as this, it is a good practice to do two things: to inform the user that the server is processing the request and has not simply crashed or otherwise failed, and to give the user some idea of how much time has elapsed since they requested the output and how much time they have remaining to wait.

This is achieved very simply in Shiny using the withProgress() function. This function defaults to measuring progress on a scale from 0 to 1 and produces a loading bar at the top of the application with the information from the message and detail arguments of the loading function.

You can see in the following code that the withProgress...