{tickle}
is a package for creating UIs in base R.
This is an opinionated abstraction over the base R package
{tcltk}
.
This package aims to provide:
- a simplified UI creation process similar to
shiny
. - a modern-looking visual default.
- more documentation to help create common UI elements without resorting to the online tcl/tk documentation.
- a way to still access the low-level tcl/tk structures in order to achieve complex effects and customisation.
- An array of
tic_*()
functions for nested creation of a UI specification. render_ui()
to render a UI specification into a window onscreen.reactive_*()
to create reactive values used to transfer values between the UI and Rcanvas_*()
functions to do some simple drawing an manipulation on canvas widgets.
- Create reactive variables (with
reactive_*()
) in order to pass values between R and the UI. e.g. the value of the slider, or the text in a text entry box. - Define callback functions that are called, say, when a button is pressed.
- Create a UI specification by nesting containers and widgets with
tic_*()
calls. This specification can include- binding callback functions to particular events like mouse
buttons or key presses (
bind
argument) - controlling how widgets are packed within their parent container
(
pack
argument)
- binding callback functions to particular events like mouse
buttons or key presses (
- Render the UI to an actual object on the screen with
render_ui()
- The object returned by
render_ui()
can be ignored by beginners. For intermediate/advanced users, this object is a nested list oftclObj
objects representing the UI components, and these can be further manipulated with{tcltk}
to finesse and configure the UI.
You can install from GitHub with:
# install.package('remotes')
remotes::install_github('coolbutuseless/tickle')
Things to note:
- Define a reactive variable for the slider before defining the UI
- UI specificaiton created with nested
tic_*()
calls. - Some commands (e.g.
tic_button()
) have an explicit command function which is run when they are activated. - After defining the UI specificaiton, it is rendered to screen with
render_ui()
library(tickle)
happiness <- reactive_dbl(40)
ui_spec <- tic_window(
title = "Hello World",
tic_row(
tic_col(
tic_button("Hello", command = function() {message("Hello")}, style = 'primary'),
tic_button("World", command = function() {message("World")})
),
tic_col(
tic_slider(happiness),
tic_label(textvariable = happiness)
)
)
)
win <- render_ui(ui_spec)
Please view the online vignettes for more details on how to use
{tickle}
- Introductory Examples
- Big example with lots of widgets
- Reactive Values
- Annotate ggplots (using mouse events)
- Pop-up Windows
- Overview of all Widgets & Containers
- JuliaSet explorer (using keyboard events and rendering to a grid window)
- Changing font
- Understanding widget layout
- Continuous rain drops using an idle callback
- Including images in buttons
Containers are ways of grouping multiple widgets.
Containers can be nested within other containers to achieve complex layouts.
Popups are windows which are initiated separate from the main UI.
Popup | Code/Description |
---|---|
popup_color_picker() |
|
popup_messagebox() |
|
popup_open_file() |
|
popup_save_file() |
After creating a canvas with tic_canvas()
, it can be manipulated with
the following commands:
- Draw on the canvas
canvas_line()
canvas_text()
canvas_rect()
canvas_polygon()
canvas_oval()
canvas_arc()
canvas_plot()
render a plot to the canvascanvas_clear()
clear all objects from the canvascanvas_image()
render an image from a file to the canvascanvas_save()
save the contents of the canvas to an image file.
The actual canvas in tcl/tk renders structured graphics and it is much more like SVG or PDF than just a simple array of pixels.
The canvas implementation in this package treats the canvas as just a raster object i.e. a rectangular collection of pixels. This made it easier to write this package and keep the API/syntax simple, but it doesn’t unleash the full power of the canvas.
The effort to write a more complete abstraction over the canvas is not currently warranted. Please get in contact if such a facility is important to you.
The theme for this package is an adaptaton of the sun-valley-light
theme available from rdbende on
github.
The sun-valley-light
theme is MIT licensed (see “LICENSE-sun-valley”)
and has been adapted into the theme r-sun-valley-light
included in
this package which has the following extra features:
- Styles ‘h1’ through ‘h5’ for different sized heading text to use
with
tic_label()
widgets.- To use:
tic_label(..., style = 'h1')
- To use:
- Standard buttons colours from
Bootstrap
to use with
tic_button()
widgets.- To use:
tic_button(..., style = 'primary')
- Available styles: primary, secondary, success, danger, warning, info, light, dark
- To use:
The following items are not yet implemented, or incomplete:
- Popup menus when a user right-clicks in the window.
- No access yet to the “grid” geometry layout.
- treeview, listbox and some other widgets
tcl
is the scripting languagetk
is the graphics toolkit fortcl
tcl/tk
is often how the langauge and toolkit are talked about as a single entity{tcltk}
is the R package interfacing totcl/tk
tcl
is often pronounced as “tickle” i.e.tcl/tk
= “tickle-tee-kay”
- R Core for developing and maintaining the language.
- CRAN maintainers, for patiently shepherding packages onto CRAN and maintaining the repository