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In this tutorial we will walk you through the basics of shiny.semantic
.
First of all, let’s answer a few questions:
shiny.semantic
?You can build your Shiny
apps with standard shiny UI that relies on Bootstrap.
This means that Shiny
attaches CSS and JS code that is responsible for its neat look.
However, after a while you might notice that all apps made this way tend to look quite similar.
shiny.semantic
helps you to add a fresh look to your web application by providing an alternative
UI framework that works under the hood.
shiny.semantic
has to do with Fomantic UI?Similarly to Shiny
attaching Bootstrap CSS and JS libraries, shiny.semantic
relies on
Fomantic UI. Historically, we built this package around Semantic UI
library, but it got deprecated and now (since December 2019) we rely on the well-supported
and maintained community fork called Fomantic UI.
Not at all! For your convenience, we created wrappers of the most popular functions
that you know from Shiny
. For example, you can create an action button using a
snake case (which is a shiny.semantic
standard): action_button
, or
you can use, more familiar from Shiny
, camel case with consistent parameters: actionButton
.
Note, however, that the philosophy behind the Bootstrap and Fomantic is quite
different, so some behaviour might also differ. Usually shiny.semantic
warns you or you
can learn more about it from documentation of a specific function.
shiny.semantic
?It depends. In general, to be able to render shiny.semantic
components correctly,
your app UI
code must be surrounded by semanticPage
(equivalent of fluidPage
)
function that switches off standard Bootstrap dependencies. Thus some components from
Shiny might look just bad, but don’t worry - most of them have shiny.semantic
alternatives.
Having said that, all of standard HTML elements from Shiny should work just fine
(like shiny::div
or shiny::h2
).
shiny.semantic
?You can use shiny.semantic
in two ways:
If you know this and that about web development, you can create a number of components
by extending standard Shiny
objects with class definitions from Fomantic UI
documentation. For example:
div(class = "ui raised segment",
div(
a(class="ui green ribbon label", "Link"),
p("Lorem ipsum, lorem ipsum, lorem ipsum"),
actionButton("button", "Click")
)
)
If you are not that comfortable with web development, you can take advantage of the number of elements that we implemented for you. See some examples below:
range_input("range", 10, 15, 0, 20)
text_input("txt", type = "text", placeholder = "Enter Text")
date_input("date")
For more components visit our Components live demo website
or the examples/
folder on our repository.
Little sneak-peak of what you can get is listed on the graphics below. Most of the components you may insert with just single line of code!
If you want to learn how to use a particular UI component, check its documentation. For example, you can call in RStudio (to see the docs for a counter button):
?counter_button
or use our documentation website.
All examples come with easy to use code snippets that will help you get started.
We hope that this short overview was useful. Good luck with building your first amazing
app with shiny.semantic
:)
These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.