Please note that if you are viewing this page at this package’s pkgdown site, despite the “released” tag, this site represents a recent development version of this package. The most-recent version of the development package has its own pkgdown site.
You can install the latest released version from CRAN with:
install.packages("bsplus")
or the latest development version from GitHub with:
# install.packages("devtools")
::install_github("ijlyttle/bsplus") devtools
To see all of this in action, you are referred to the getting-started article at this package’s pkgdown site.
The goals of this package are:
This family of functions lets you build another dimension to your shiny apps, although you can still use it rmarkdown HTML documents, explained further in this article.
These functions make it easier to incorporate help-documentation into your shiny apps - functions for incorporating tooltips, popovers, and modals into the labels of shiny inputs, explained further in this article.
A carousel is a Boostrap JavaScript component used to enclose a set of (typically) images, providing controls to move slides back-and-forth - as shown in this article. I think that this could be a more-useful tool if an “easy” way can be found to populate a carousel with images produced by gganimate.
In this package, there are function families for:
bs_collapse()
bs_accordion()
bs_accordion_sidebar()
bs_embed_tooltip()
bs_embed_popover()
bs_modal()
bs_carousel()
There are also helper functions:
shiny_iconlink()
,
shinyInput_label_embed()
data-
and aria-
attributes of tags:
bs_set_data()
, bs_set_aria()
One of the goals of this package is to implement consistent grammar
and vocabulary. To keep the namespace clean(er), many of the functions
have the prefix bs_
.
Let’s start with the conventions used to name the functions:
bs_noun()
, used to create a tag
. For
example, use bs_accordion()
to create an accordion
panel-set.
bs_verb(tag, ...)
, used to take an action on a
tag
. For example, use bs_append()
to append a
panel to an accordion panel-set.
bs_verb_noun(tag, ...)
used to take an action on a
tag
using a thing
. For example, use
bs_embed_tooltip()
to embed a tooltip into a
tag
.
use_bs_noun()
used to add a bit of Javascript to
your HTML, just like the shinyjs function
useShinyJS()
. This is necessary for
bs_accordion_sidebar()
, bs_embed_tooltip()
, or
bs_embed_popover()
to work properly.
Often we use the words element and tag interchangeably - we are talking about HTML elements. In the grammar of this documentation (and package), it can be useful to think about direct objects and indirect objects, so the word tag is used to denote direct objects, and the words element or thing are used to denote indirect objects.
In the context of a set of piped functions, the first argument will
always be the direct object; the name of the first argument of many
functions is tag
- you will be sending the tag through the
pipe.
bs_append(tag, ...)
used to append something to a tag,
perhaps a panel into an accordion-group.bs_attach_foo(tag, ...)
used to attach the
id
of an element (foo) to another tag, for example, you
could create a modal window using bs_modal()
, then you
could attach the id
of the modal window to the tag
using bs_attach_modal()
bs_emded_foo(tag, ...)
used to embed something (a foo)
into a tag, for example, bs_embed_tooltip()
bs_set_opts(tag, ...)
used to set some options for the
items yet to be appended to a tag.Let’s consider the differences between append
,
attach
, and embed
:
id
of an element, not the element
itself. However, we can attach an id
of an element to more
than one tag.This package draws inspiration from shinyBS, written by Eric Bailey, and leans heavily on htmltools, written by RStudio.
Please note that this project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct. By participating in this project you agree to abide by its terms.