Interactive R Notebooks/Dashboards for Non-R Users - r

Not sure this is the right place for this kind of question, but I am looking for ideas on how to share some R Markdown Notebooks with non-R users, but that still have some dynamic functionality in them. For example, I can create a notebook with html-widgets to adjust time windows, choose different data points, etc. I compile this in R Studio and it looks great on my machine. But sharing the .nb.html file with co-workers, they don't get the same level of interactivity, which is expected.
Is there a way to share these files or similar R files with non-R users? Additionally, I don't have access to a personal/company website where I could host these notebooks.

you could for example use :
DT package to give your Rmd output filter- able html data frames .
you can also use plotly() to have interactiv plots [easy to do for ggplot2 users using ggplotly() ]
further check out :
flexdashboards https://rmarkdown.rstudio.com/flexdashboard/
sematic dashboards. https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/semantic.dashboard/semantic.dashboard.pdf
both are solutions for more dynamic Rmarkdown reports, but not as demanding to programm as full blown shiny apps.

Related

R : GUIs fast to launch (alternatives to shiny ?)

I am trying to make some GUI for my CRAN package
some f function that locally launches a popup with a few params rendering a few outputs, like launching locally a simple shiny app.
the popup permits to select the parameters easily and then a "validate" button triggers the return of fwith the selected parameters, like shiny with stopApp
I have already done that with shiny but i think the result is a bit unsatisfying because shiny apps are slow to launch and stop (if there is an object to serialize i guess).
I have seen that some packages, like vdiffr, seem to answer this problem by making a list of the objects to change, thus they only launch shiny once to change everything with some selecter. If possible I'd like to avoid this solution.
So the question is : is there some kind of GUI framework more convenient than Shiny for this (only local, fast launch and fast return) ? Or some fine way to do that, that is light enough (I don't want to make my package to be extraordinary heavy for a small popup) ?
Here are GUI facilities that come with R (no packages needed):
(1) For sufficiently simple applications select.list, menu, readline, file.choose and choose.dir can be used and will present with a text or graphical user interface depending on what environment the user has. These all come with R and launch very quickly and are easy to program. See the help pages of those commands and try:
select.list(c("oranges", "apples", "pears"))
menu(c("oranges", "apples", "pears"))
readline("Enter name of fruit: ")
choose.dir()
file.choose()
(2) A possibility which is capable of user interfaces as sophisticated as shiny is the tcltk package. This comes with R so it does not need to be installed. It only needs to be loaded using a library statement. (If a user builds R from source then it is possible to build it without tcltk capability but in 99% of all cases tcltk will be present).
There are a few short examples of R source code employing tcltk here: https://www.stat.berkeley.edu/~s133/Gui-a.html, quite a few more examples at James Wettenhall's site and one can run the Rcmdr R package to see an example of a sophisticated tcltk user interface although running Rcmdr will take longer to load than a simple application due to its large size.
Because tcltk is a part of R itself it does not have a CRAN page but for additional packages that use tcltk look at the reverse dependencies of the tcltk2 package at the bottom of its CRAN page since any package that depends on it must also use tcltk.
That really depends on your coding knowledge. My first approach, however, would be to try to improve your shiny app. For that you can use the profvis package to check why exactly your shiny app is slow. Should you decide to stay with Shiny, there a lot of ways on how to reduce the starting time of Shiny. However, if you should come to the conclusion, that you really want to throw shiny overboard, then you should consider using JavaScript.
Either you write your complete app in pure JavaScript
Or you can use JavaScript within Shiny (e.g. r2d3)
Of course there are other ways as #Pork Chop mentioned of using rmarkdown or normal markdown.

ipywidget interactive plot in Html presentations ipython notebook

I would like to use the interactive function from ipywidget in an ipython notebook to make a presentation in notebook.
I have stored my data in a pickle file and what I want is to change the parameters interactively so that I can see my plot.
My code is like this.
def spin(model, power):
with open(path_cluster1+'SSHFS/Model'+str(model)+'/'+str(power)+'/spinpython2.pickle','rb') as f:
spin = pickle.load(f)
plt.plot(spin)
plt.title('Power'+str(power*0.1))
interactive(spin, model=(1,4,1), power=(70,101,1))
My collaborators are unfamiliar with python so in principle I would like to make the life easier for them to see my data just by changing a parameter in a html page. Maybe I have to save all the data in a pickle file but the question is if this can work in a html without running python.
Is something like this possible?
Have a look at https://www.nbinteract.com/. To quote from the website "nbinteract is a Python package that provides a command-line tool to generate interactive web pages from Jupyter notebooks."

Where can I find information on how to structure long R code? [duplicate]

Does anyone have any wisdom on workflows for data analysis related to custom report writing? The use-case is basically this:
Client commissions a report that uses data analysis, e.g. a population estimate and related maps for a water district.
The analyst downloads some data, munges the data and saves the result (e.g. adding a column for population per unit, or subsetting the data based on district boundaries).
The analyst analyzes the data created in (2), gets close to her goal, but sees that needs more data and so goes back to (1).
Rinse repeat until the tables and graphics meet QA/QC and satisfy the client.
Write report incorporating tables and graphics.
Next year, the happy client comes back and wants an update. This should be as simple as updating the upstream data by a new download (e.g. get the building permits from the last year), and pressing a "RECALCULATE" button, unless specifications change.
At the moment, I just start a directory and ad-hoc it the best I can. I would like a more systematic approach, so I am hoping someone has figured this out... I use a mix of spreadsheets, SQL, ARCGIS, R, and Unix tools.
Thanks!
PS:
Below is a basic Makefile that checks for dependencies on various intermediate datasets (w/ .RData suffix) and scripts (.R suffix). Make uses timestamps to check dependencies, so if you touch ss07por.csv, it will see that this file is newer than all the files / targets that depend on it, and execute the given scripts in order to update them accordingly. This is still a work in progress, including a step for putting into SQL database, and a step for a templating language like sweave. Note that Make relies on tabs in its syntax, so read the manual before cutting and pasting. Enjoy and give feedback!
http://www.gnu.org/software/make/manual/html_node/index.html#Top
R=/home/wsprague/R-2.9.2/bin/R
persondata.RData : ImportData.R ../../DATA/ss07por.csv Functions.R
$R --slave -f ImportData.R
persondata.Munged.RData : MungeData.R persondata.RData Functions.R
$R --slave -f MungeData.R
report.txt: TabulateAndGraph.R persondata.Munged.RData Functions.R
$R --slave -f TabulateAndGraph.R > report.txt
I generally break my projects into 4 pieces:
load.R
clean.R
func.R
do.R
load.R: Takes care of loading in all the data required. Typically this is a short file, reading in data from files, URLs and/or ODBC. Depending on the project at this point I'll either write out the workspace using save() or just keep things in memory for the next step.
clean.R: This is where all the ugly stuff lives - taking care of missing values, merging data frames, handling outliers.
func.R: Contains all of the functions needed to perform the actual analysis. source()'ing this file should have no side effects other than loading up the function definitions. This means that you can modify this file and reload it without having to go back an repeat steps 1 & 2 which can take a long time to run for large data sets.
do.R: Calls the functions defined in func.R to perform the analysis and produce charts and tables.
The main motivation for this set up is for working with large data whereby you don't want to have to reload the data each time you make a change to a subsequent step. Also, keeping my code compartmentalized like this means I can come back to a long forgotten project and quickly read load.R and work out what data I need to update, and then look at do.R to work out what analysis was performed.
If you'd like to see some examples, I have a few small (and not so small) data cleaning and analysis projects available online. In most, you'll find a script to download the data, one to clean it up, and a few to do exploration and analysis:
Baby names from the social security administration
30+ years of fuel economy data from the EPI
A big collection of data about the housing crisis
Movie ratings from the IMDB
House sale data in the Bay Area
Recently I have started numbering the scripts, so it's completely obvious in which order they should be run. (If I'm feeling really fancy I'll sometimes make it so that the exploration script will call the cleaning script which in turn calls the download script, each doing the minimal work necessary - usually by checking for the presence of output files with file.exists. However, most times this seems like overkill).
I use git for all my projects (a source code management system) so its easy to collaborate with others, see what is changing and easily roll back to previous versions.
If I do a formal report, I usually keep R and latex separate, but I always make sure that I can source my R code to produce all the code and output that I need for the report. For the sorts of reports that I do, I find this easier and cleaner than working with latex.
I agree with the other responders: Sweave is excellent for report writing with R. And rebuilding the report with updated results is as simple as re-calling the Sweave function. It's completely self-contained, including all the analysis, data, etc. And you can version control the whole file.
I use the StatET plugin for Eclipse for developing the reports, and Sweave is integrated (Eclipse recognizes latex formating, etc). On Windows, it's easy to use MikTEX.
I would also add, that you can create beautiful reports with Beamer. Creating a normal report is just as simple. I included an example below that pulls data from Yahoo! and creates a chart and a table (using quantmod). You can build this report like so:
Sweave(file = "test.Rnw")
Here's the Beamer document itself:
%
\documentclass[compress]{beamer}
\usepackage{Sweave}
\usetheme{PaloAlto}
\begin{document}
\title{test report}
\author{john doe}
\date{September 3, 2009}
\maketitle
\begin{frame}[fragile]\frametitle{Page 1: chart}
<<echo=FALSE,fig=TRUE,height=4, width=7>>=
library(quantmod)
getSymbols("PFE", from="2009-06-01")
chartSeries(PFE)
#
\end{frame}
\begin{frame}[fragile]\frametitle{Page 2: table}
<<echo=FALSE,results=tex>>=
library(xtable)
xtable(PFE[1:10,1:4], caption = "PFE")
#
\end{frame}
\end{document}
I just wanted to add, in case anyone missed it, that there's a great post on the learnr blog about creating repetitive reports with Jeffrey Horner's brew package. Matt and Kevin both mentioned brew above. I haven't actually used it much myself.
The entries follows a nice workflow, so it's well worth a read:
Prepare the data.
Prepare the report template.
Produce the report.
Actually producing the report once the first two steps are complete is very simple:
library(tools)
library(brew)
brew("population.brew", "population.tex")
texi2dvi("population.tex", pdf = TRUE)
For creating custom reports, I've found it useful to incorporate many of the existing tips suggested here.
Generating reports:
A good strategy for generating reports involves the combination of Sweave, make, and R.
Editor:
Good editors for preparing Sweave documents include:
StatET and Eclipse
Emacs and ESS
Vim and Vim-R
R Studio
Code organisation:
In terms of code organisation, I find two strategies useful:
Read up about analysis workflow (e.g., ProjectTemplate,
Josh Reich's ideas, my own presentation on R workflow
Slides
and Video )
Study example reports and discern the workflow
Hadley Wickham's examples
My examples on github
Examples of reproducible research listed on Cross Validated
I use Sweave for the report-producing side of this, but I've also been hearing about the brew package - though I haven't yet looked into it.
Essentially, I have a number of surveys for which I produce summary statistics. Same surveys, same reports every time. I built a Sweave template for the reports (which takes a bit of work). But once the work is done, I have a separate R script that lets me point out the new data. I press "Go", Sweave dumps out a few score .tex files, and I run a little Python script to pdflatex them all. My predecessor spent ~6 weeks each year on these reports; I spend about 3 days (mostly on cleaning data; escape characters are hazardous).
It's very possible that there are better approaches now, but if you do decide to go this route, let me know - I've been meaning to put up some of my Sweave hacks, and that would be a good kick in the pants to do so.
I'm going to suggest something in a different sort of direction from the other submitters, based on the fact that you asked specifically about project workflow, rather than tools. Assuming you're relatively happy with your document-production model, it sounds like your challenges really may be centered more around issues of version tracking, asset management, and review/publishing process.
If that sounds correct, I would suggest looking into an integrated ticketing/source management/documentation tool like Redmine. Keeping related project artifacts such as pending tasks, discussion threads, and versioned data/code files together can be a great help even for projects well outside the traditional "programming" bailiwick.
Agreed that Sweave is the way to go, with xtable for generating LaTeX tables. Although I haven't spent too much time working with them, the recently released tikzDevice package looks really promising, particularly when coupled with pgfSweave (which, as far as I know is only available on rforge.net at this time -- there is a link to r-forge from there, but it's not responding for me at the moment).
Between the two, you'll get consistent formatting between text and figures (fonts, etc.). With brew, these might constitute the holy grail of report generation.
At a more "meta" level, you might be interested in the CRISP-DM process model.
"make" is great because (1) you can use it for all your work in any language (unlike, say, Sweave and Brew), (2) it is very powerful (enough to build all the software on your machine), and (3) it avoids repeating work. This last point is important to me because a lot of the work is slow; when I latex a file, I like to see the result in a few seconds, not the hour it would take to recreate the figures.
I use project templates along with R studio, currently mine contains the following folders:
info : pdfs, powerpoints, docs... which won't be used by any script
data input : data that will be used by my scripts but not generated by them
data output : data generated by my scripts for further use but not as a proper report.
reports : Only files that will actually be shown to someone else
R : All R scripts
SAS : Because I sometimes have to :'(
I wrote custom functions so I can call smart_save(x,y) or smart_load(x) to save or load RDS files to and from the data output folder (files named with variable names) so I'm not bothered by paths during my analysis.
A custom function new_project creates a numbered project folder, copies all the files from the template, renames the RProj file and edits the setwd calls, and set working directory to new project.
All R scripts are in the R folder, structured as follow :
00_main.R
setwd
calls scripts 1 to 5
00_functions.R
All functions and only functions go there, if there's too many I'll separate it into several, all named like 00_functions_something.R, in particular if I plan to make a package out of some of them I'll put them apart
00_explore.R
a bunch of script chunks where i'm testing things or exploring my data
It's the only file where i'm allowed to be messy.
01_initialize.R
Prefilled with a call to a more general initialize_general.R script from my template folder which loads the packages and data I always use and don't mind having in my workspace
loads 00_functions.R (prefilled)
loads additional libraries
set global variables
02_load data.R
loads csv/txt xlsx RDS, there's a prefilled commented line for every type of file
displays which files hava been created in the workspace
03_pull data from DB.R
Uses dbplyr to fetch filtered and grouped tables from the DB
some prefilled commented lines to set up connections and fetch.
Keep client side operations to bare minimum
No server side operations outside of this script
Displays which files have been created in the workspace
Saves these variables so they can be reloaded faster
Once it's been done once I switch off a query_db boolean and the data will reloaded from RDS next time.
It can happen that I have to refeed data to DBs, If so I'll create additional steps.
04_Build.R
Data wrangling, all the fun dplyr / tidyr stuff goes there
displays which files have been created in the workspace
save these variables
Once it's been done once I switch off a build boolean and the data will reloaded from RDS next time.
05_Analyse.R
Summarize, model...
report excel and csv files
95_build ppt.R
template for powerpoint report using officer
96_prepare markdown.R
setwd
load data
set markdown parameters if needed
render
97_prepare shiny.R
setwd
load data
set shiny parameters if needed
runApp
98_Markdown report.Rmd
A report template
99_Shiny report.Rmd
An app template
For writing a quick preliminary report or email to a colleague, I find that it can be very efficient to copy-and-paste plots into MS Word or an email or wiki page -- often best is a bitmapped screenshot (e.g. on mac, Apple-Shift-(Ctrl)-4). I think this is an underrated technique.
For a more final report, writing R functions to easily regenerate all the plots (as files) is very important. It does take more time to code this up.
On the larger workflow issues, I like Hadley's answer on enumerating the code/data files for the cleaning and analysis flow. All of my data analysis projects have a similar structure.
I'll add my voice to sweave. For complicated, multi-step analysis you can use a makefile to specify the different parts. Can prevent having to repeat the whole analysis if just one part has changed.
I also do what Josh Reich does, only I do that creating my personal R-packages, as it helps me structure my code and data, and it is also quite easy to share those with others.
create my package
load
clean
functions
do
creating my package: devtools::create('package_name')
load and clean: I create scripts in the data-raw/ subfolder of my package for loading, cleaning, and storing the resulting data objects in the package using devtools::use_data(object_name). Then I compile the package.
From now on, calling library(package_name) makes these data available (and they are not loaded until necessary).
functions: I put the functions for my analyses into the R/ subfolder of my package, and export only those that need to be called from outside (and not the helper functions, which can remain invisible).
do: I create a script that uses the data and functions stored in my package.
(If the analyses only need to be done once, I can put this script as well into the data-raw/ subfolder, run it, and store the results in the package to make it easily accessible.)

R Plot Auto-View

I'm trying to figure a way to automatically open the pdf-output of an R script after i run it. My goal is to integrate that into Sublime Text (under osx) to make something like an automatic viewer for my generated plots.
Any idea is welcome (obviously if there exists a plugin that already acts as a viewer for R, much better)

How to save an interactive plot produced by ggvis?

I have produced a plot using the ggvis package in R. The plot is interactive which can be changed by moving around the slider. However when I save it, it is just a picture of current status without sliders.
I have seen people posting these interactive plots on the website, so I think there should be a way to save it first. How can I do this?
From the Rstudio page for ggvis:
Note: If you’re viewing the HTML version of this document generated with knitr, the examples will have their interactive features disabled. You’ll need to run the code in R to see and use the interactive controls.
From this and the whole page I gather that sharing the interactive graphics can be done using Shiny Apps and/or R Markdown documents. To deploy either of those to people who do not have R installed you need to a) use Shiny Apps IO; or b) install Shiny Server, which has a free version with very basic administration capabilities, and a paid version for confidential information in corporate environment (which I'm only mentioning in case you are not allowed to share your data).
Either way, read through the Shiny Tutorial, the
R Markdown Tutorial, and the combination.

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