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Data as shiny Module

NEST CoreDev

Introduction

Proper functioning of any teal application requires the presence of a teal_data object. Typically, a teal_data object created in the global environment will be passed to the data argument in init. This teal_data object should contain all elements necessary for successful execution of the application’s modules.

In some scenarios, however, application developers may opt to postpone some data operations until the application runtime. This can be done by passing a special shiny module to the data argument. The teal_data_module function is used to build such a module from the following components:

teal will run this module when the application starts and the resulting teal_data object that will be used throughout all teal (analytic) modules.

Creating data in-app

One case for postponing data operations is datasets that are dynamic, frequently updated. Such data cannot be created once and kept in the global environment. Using teal_data_module enables creating a dataset from scratch every time the user starts the application.

library(teal)
data_module <- teal_data_module(
  ui = function(id) div(),
  server = function(id) {
    moduleServer(id, function(input, output, session) {
      reactive({
        data <- within(
          teal_data(),
          {
            dataset1 <- iris
            dataset2 <- mtcars
          }
        )
        datanames(data) <- c("dataset1", "dataset2") # optional
        data
      })
    })
  }
)


app <- init(
  data = data_module,
  modules = example_module()
)

if (interactive()) {
  shinyApp(app$ui, app$server)
}

See ?qenv for a detailed explanation of how to use the within method.

Modification of data in-app

Another reason to postpone data operations is to involve the application user in the preprocessing stage. An initial, constant form of the data can be created in the global environment and then modified once the app starts.

The following example illustrates how teal_data_module can be utilized to subset data based on the user inputs:

data <- within(teal_data(), {
  dataset1 <- iris
  dataset2 <- mtcars
})
datanames(data) <- c("dataset1", "dataset2")

data_module <- teal_data_module(
  ui = function(id) {
    ns <- NS(id)
    div(
      selectInput(ns("species"), "Select species to keep",
        choices = unique(iris$Species), multiple = TRUE
      ),
      actionButton(ns("submit"), "Submit")
    )
  },
  server = function(id) {
    moduleServer(id, function(input, output, session) {
      eventReactive(input$submit, {
        data_modified <- within(
          data,
          dataset1 <- subset(dataset1, Species %in% selected),
          selected = input$species
        )
        data_modified
      })
    })
  }
)

app <- init(
  data = data_module,
  modules = example_module()
)

if (interactive()) {
  shinyApp(app$ui, app$server)
}

Note that running preprocessing code in a module as opposed to the global environment will increase app loading times. It is recommended to keep the constant code in the global environment and to move only the dynamic parts to a data module.

WARNING

When using teal_data_module to modify a pre-existing teal_data object, it is crucial that the server function and the data object are defined in the same environment, otherwise the server function will not be able to access the data object. This means server functions defined in packages cannot be used.

Extending existing teal_data_modules

The server logic of a teal_data_module can be modified before it is used in an app, using the within function. This allows the teal_data object that is created in the teal_data_module to be processed further.

In the previous example, data_module takes a predefined teal_data object and allows the app user to select a subset. The following example modifies data_module so that new columns are added once the data is retrieved.

data_module_2 <- within(
  data_module,
  {
    # Create new column with Ratio of Sepal.Width and Petal.Width
    dataset1$Ratio.Sepal.Petal.Width <- round(dataset1$Sepal.Width / dataset1$Petal.Width, digits = 2L)
    # Create new column that converts Miles per Galon to Liter per 100 Km
    dataset2$lp100km <- round(dataset2$mpg * 0.42514371, digits = 2L)
  }
)

app <- init(
  data = data_module_2,
  modules = example_module()
)

if (interactive()) {
  shinyApp(app$ui, app$server)
}

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.