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Web Application Development with R Using Shiny Second Edition

You're reading from   Web Application Development with R Using Shiny Second Edition Integrate the power of R with the simplicity of Shiny to deliver cutting-edge analytics over the Web

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781782174349
Length 194 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
Tools
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Author (1):
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Chris Beeley Chris Beeley
Author Profile Icon Chris Beeley
Chris Beeley
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Toc

Table of Contents (9) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with R and Shiny! FREE CHAPTER 2. Building Your First Application 3. Building Your Own Web Pages with Shiny 4. Taking Control of Reactivity, Inputs, and Outputs 5. Advanced Applications I – Dashboards 6. Advanced Applications II – Using JavaScript Libraries in Shiny Applications 7. Sharing Your Creations Index

Downloading and uploading data


Downloading data is done in a very similar fashion, which looks like the following downloadHandler() call:

output$downloadData <- downloadHandler(
  filename = function(){
    "myData.csv"
  }
  content = function(file){
    write.csv(passData(), file)
  }
)

Uploading data is achieved using the fileInput() function. In the following example, we will assume that the user wishes to upload a comma-separated spreadsheet (.csv) file. The button is added to ui.R in the following manner:

fileInput("uploadFile", "Upload your own CSV file")

This button allows a user to select their own .csv file, and it also makes a variety of objects based on the ID (in this case, input$uploadFile$...) available from server.R. The most useful is input$uploadFile$datapath, which is a path to the file itself and can be turned into a dataframe using read.csv():

userData <- read.csv(input$uploadFile$datapath)

There are other bits of information about the file available. Take a look at...

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