9

I use the (awesome) package rhandsontable that will later be included in an R shiny webpage. The user can click at some places, and I want to know how to retrieve the info on which rows was clicked. Here is an example, (to be copy&paste in an R terminal):

library(rhandsontable)

## Create the dataset
min = c(1,seq(2,34,by=2))
kmh = c(0,seq(7,23,by=1))
mph = round( kmh / 1.609344, digits=0 )
stop.speed = rep(FALSE, length(min))    
DF = data.frame(min, kmh, mph, stop.speed, stringsAsFactors = FALSE)

#plot the table
r = rhandsontable(DF, useTypes = TRUE)

I thought about converting it to an R object:

hot_to_r(r)

Error in (function (data, changes, params, ...)  : 
argument "params" is missing, with no default

5 Answers 5

6

The question is 4 years old, but still relevant for the rhandsontable package users. Also, the solution provided by Lyx above no longer works. Following is an easy fix to the problem.

Every rhandsontable object is a deeply nested list. One of its elements is the data element, which itself is nested under the x element. However, the data is in json format, but it can easily be converted to a data.frame by using the fromJSON() function in the jsonlite package.

library(rhandsontable)
library(jsonlite)

hands_on_table <- rhandsontable(mtcars)
data_frame <- fromJSON(hands_on_table$x$data)
head(data_frame)

   mpg cyl disp  hp drat    wt  qsec vs am gear carb
1 21.0   6  160 110 3.90 2.620 16.46  0  1    4    4
2 21.0   6  160 110 3.90 2.875 17.02  0  1    4    4
3 22.8   4  108  93 3.85 2.320 18.61  1  1    4    1
4 21.4   6  258 110 3.08 3.215 19.44  1  0    3    1
5 18.7   8  360 175 3.15 3.440 17.02  0  0    3    2
6 18.1   6  225 105 2.76 3.460 20.22  1  0    3    1

Edit:

It is important to also mention that the main difference between using hot_to_r and jsonlite::fromJSON is that the former is used while the app is running and the latter only works in an interactive R session.

2

Besides shinysky, another solution is call back the handsontable:

server.R

DF = hot_to_r(input$table)

in the ui.R, table had been called using:

rHandsontableOutput("table")

DF can then be used as any R data frame

1
  • After reading above answers, I was about to reply to this post and to say "just use hot_to_r but found your answer at the very last, thanks!
    – yeahman269
    Aug 11, 2020 at 17:20
2

Once in the shiny app you can use:

input$table_select$select$r # access the row number
input$table_select$select$c # access the column number
input$table_select$data[[input$table_select$select$r]][[input$table_select$select$c]] # access the data in a cell

You could write a small function to 'translate' the row and column number into a position in your dataframe/matrix/etc, or just access the value as above.

Hope this helps.

1
  • works fine, just need to add selectCallback = TRUE to rhandsontable()
    – Gimelist
    Nov 13, 2020 at 3:08
1

Have a look at shinysky package. Note that I show the table with the implemented changes also so you can check your work

rm(list = ls())
library(shiny)
library(shinysky)

## Create the dataset
min = c(1,seq(2,34,by=2))
kmh = c(0,seq(7,23,by=1))
mph = round( kmh / 1.609344, digits=0 )
stop.speed = rep(FALSE, length(min))    
DF = data.frame(min, kmh, mph, stop.speed, stringsAsFactors = FALSE)

server <- shinyServer(function(input, output, session) {

  # Initiate your table
  previous <- reactive({DF})

  MyChanges <- reactive({
    if(is.null(input$hotable1)){return(previous())}
    else if(!identical(previous(),input$hotable1)){
      # hot.to.df function will convert your updated table into the dataframe
      as.data.frame(hot.to.df(input$hotable1))
    }
  })
  output$hotable1 <- renderHotable({MyChanges()}, readOnly = F)
  # You can see the changes you made
  output$tbl = DT::renderDataTable(MyChanges())
})

ui <- basicPage(mainPanel(column(6,hotable("hotable1")),column(6,DT::dataTableOutput('tbl'))))
shinyApp(ui, server)

enter image description here

3
  • Thanks for that detailed example. So you create a DF, then create a table out of it, then check that it has changed and create a DF out of it, right? Regarding my initial question, I can now retrieve the changed rows by doing: "MyChanges[which(MyChanges$stop.speed == TRUE),]", is that correct? Sep 22, 2016 at 14:55
  • Looks like the ShinySky package does not fit with the latest R version package ‘shinysky’ is not available (for R version 3.3.1) same error for R 3.2.4 Sep 22, 2016 at 14:59
  • I'm on R version 3.1.3 and shinysky version 0.1.2
    – Pork Chop
    Sep 22, 2016 at 15:09
1

You can install shinysky package in r 3.3.1 by following the below mentioned steps :-

install.packages("devtools") 
devtools::install_github("AnalytixWare/ShinySky")

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