Easily add help documentation to shiny elements, using markdown files.
The advantages of using this package are:
- add help files with a single extra function call
- leverage the formatting power of markdown to go beyond simple tooltips
- customise the appearance and positioning of the help icons, and the size of help pages
- additional function to quickly create a suitable directory of markdown files
shinyhelper 0.3.2 now on CRAN!
You can install the package with:
install.packages("shinyhelper")
To get the latest development version, you can use the devtools
package to install from GitHub directly:
devtools::install_github("cwthom/shinyhelper")
In both cases, then load the package in with:
library(shinyhelper)
There is a live demo hosted on shinyapps.io. Click here to go to the demo!
Alternatively, run the demo locally with:
library(shinyhelper)
shinyhelper_demo()
You can add help files to any shiny element, including all inputs and outputs, with a simple call to helper()
:
# load the package
library(shinyhelper)
...
# For elements in your ui you wish to add a help icon to
helper(plotOutput(outputId = "plot"))
# if you have %>% loaded, you can do plotOutput(outputId = "plot") %>% helper()
...
# In your server script, include:
observe_helpers()
# this triggers the modal dialogs when the user clicks an icon
# specify the name of your directory of help markdown files here
# e.g. observe_helpers(help_dir = "help_mds") will look for a directory called help_mds
# If you wish to include mathematical formulae in your markdown, use the `withMathJax` argument:
# observe_helpers(withMathJax = TRUE)
You can define helper
s in dynamic UI elements as well, and have the help file rendered dynamically on the server side. This allows for :
- conditioning which help file to show
- defining inline content based on input settings
All you need now is some content for your help page. You can specify this in 2 ways:
To specify inline content, simply set type = "inline"
in helper
, and supply the title
and content
arguments. content
can be a character vector, in which case each element will be a new line. You can also use raw HTML tags to format your inline content E.g.
plotOutput(outputId = "plot") %>% helper(type = "inline",
title = "Plot",
content = c("This is a <b>plot</b>.",
"This is on a new line."))
To use markdown, set type = "markdown"
in helper
, and supply the name of your markdown file (without the .md) in the content
argument. This file should be in the directory specified by the help_dir
argument to observe_helpers
. E.g.
plotOutput(outputId = "plot") %>% helper(type = "markdown",
content = "Plot")
# this will search for 'Plot.md' in the directory given in observe_helpers
You can specify a title
argument too, or leave it blank and use a ## Heading
in your markdown document.
You can change the type of icon used and its colour, as well as passing CSS inline.
The icons are shiny::icon("question-circle")
icons by default, but you can change them individually using the icon
argument of helper()
:
plotOutput(outputId = "plot") %>% helper(icon = "exclamation")
Please see Font Awesome for the available icons.
You can change the icon colour with the colour
argument. Pass it any valid CSS colour as a character string.
plotOutput(outputId = "plot") %>% helper(colour = "green")
You can pass a style
argument to modify CSS inline. This applies to the <div>
containing the icon.
plotOutput(outputId = "plot") %>% helper(style = "color: red;")
Note: Passing a colour in a style
argument will override colour
.
By default, all help files are medium sized modalDialog()
boxes (size = "m"
). You can change each one though, by passing the size
argument to helper()
:
plotOutput(outputId = "plot") %>% helper(size = "l")
You can also change:
- the label on the
modalButton
, with thebuttonLabel
argument - the
easyClose
andfade
arguments governing the behaviour of the modal
There is also a function, create_help_files()
to quickly create a directory of help files from a vector of names.
# Run this interactively, not in a shiny app
create_help_files(files = c("Clusters", "Columns", "PlotHelp"),
help_dir = "helpfiles")
The help_dir
will be "helpfiles" by default.
Obviously, this package would not be possible (or indeed meaningful) without the incredible shiny package. Full credit to the authors of shiny for doing all of the actual work!
Many thanks also to Guangchang Yu for the wonderful hexSticker package!