Description Usage Arguments Details Value Note Author(s) References See Also Examples
These functions allow Shiny apps to read and write the par3d
settings that may have been modified by user interaction in the browser.
1 2 3 | shinyGetPar3d(parameters, session, subscene = currentSubscene3d(cur3d()), tag = "")
shinySetPar3d(..., session, subscene = currentSubscene3d(cur3d()))
shinyResetBrush(session, brush)
|
parameters |
A character vector naming the parameters to get. |
session |
The Shiny session object. |
subscene |
The subscene to which the parameters apply. Defaults to the currently active subscene in the R session. |
tag |
An arbitrary string or value which will be sent as part of the response. |
... |
A number of |
brush |
The name of a Shiny input element corresponding to
the |
Requesting information from the browser is a complicated process.
The shinyGetPar3d
function doesn't return the requested value,
it just submits a request for the value to be returned later in
input$par3d
, a reactive input. No action will result
except when a reactive observer depends on input$par3d
.
See the example code below.
The shinySetPar3d
function sends a message to the browser
asking it to change a particular parameter. The change will be
made immediately, without sending the full scene to the browser,
so should be reasonably fast.
These functions are called for their side effects, and don't return useful values.
The side effect of shinyGetPar3d
is to cause input$par3d
to be updated sometime later.
Besides the requested parameter values, input$par3d
will
contain a copy of the subscene
and tag
arguments.
The side effect of shinySetPar3d
is to send a message to the
browser to update its copy of the par3d
parameters
immediately.
R and the browser don't maintain a perfect match between the way
parameters are stored internally. The browser version of parameters
will be returned by shinyGetPar3d
and should be supplied to
shinySetPar3d
.
Duncan Murdoch
https://shiny.rstudio.com/articles/communicating-with-js.html describes the underlying mechanisms used by these two functions.
The rglwidget
argument shinySelectionInput
allows information about mouse selections
to be returned to R.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 | if (interactive()) {
save <- options(rgl.useNULL = TRUE)
xyz <- matrix(rnorm(300), ncol = 3)
app = shiny::shinyApp(
ui = shiny::bootstrapPage(
shiny::actionButton("redraw", "Redraw"),
rglwidgetOutput("rglPlot")
),
server = function(input, output, session) {
# This waits until the user to click on the "redraw"
# button, then sends a request for the current userMatrix
shiny::observeEvent(input$redraw, {
shinyGetPar3d("userMatrix", session)
})
# This draws the plot whenever input$par3d changes,
# i.e. whenever a response to the request above is
# received.
output$rglPlot <- renderRglwidget({
if (length(rgl.dev.list())) close3d()
col <- sample(colors(), 1)
plot3d(xyz, col = col, type = "s", main = col)
par3d(userMatrix = input$par3d$userMatrix)
rglwidget()
})
})
shiny::runApp(app)
options(save)
}
|
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