The lcars
package provides Shiny widgets and Shiny UI theme that
support an LCARS aesthetic for Shiny apps.
Using an LCARS aesthetic to visually frame the results of your analysis is fun and quirky in its own right, but it begs the next obvious step: interactivity. LCARS-themed displays can be fun to make, but using Shiny is much more exciting because you can make something with the look and feel of LCARS that also is actually operational and not just another piece of static digital fan art!
That’s right. Make your Shiny app, view it on a touch screen device like your very own Federation-issue data PADD, and transport yourself into the future of the Star Trek universe with this 1980s sci-fi television aesthetic!
The package also offers lcars_border()
and associated functions for
adding a minimal LCARS theme to static ggplot2 graphs, but this is less
interesting given the context and won’t look as authentic and the Shiny
counterparts.
On the topic of the split between Shiny and non-Shiny functions, most of
the package is Shiny-related. There is less focus on the ggplot border
effect and related border component functions. Shiny functions use camel
case like lcarsBox()
whereas non-Shiny functions use snake case like
lcars_border()
. Most users will probably only use the Shiny functions.
There are several Shiny functions available. These are UI containers and widgets that provide various LCARS aesthetics.
UI setup and containers:
lcarsPage()
lcarsBox()
lcarsSweep()
lcarsBracket()
lcarsWell()
inputColumn()
Headers and indicators:
lcarsHeader()
, lcarsh1()
through lcarsh6()
.lcarsRect()
, lcarsPill()
, etc.Input controls
lcarsButton()
lcarsCheckbox()
lcarsToggle()
lcarsRadio()
lcarsRadioToggle()
The key widgets are lcarsHeader()
, lcarsBox()
and lcarsSweep()
. An
example of the header and box is shown above. Here is a combined LCARS
sweep and reverse sweep:
The screenshots above are taken directly from demo apps included in the
package. See lcarsApp()
for details. For detailed examples including
Shiny app examples, see the package
vignette.
Install the CRAN release of lcars
with
install.packages("lcars")
Install the development version from GitHub with
# install.packages("remotes")
remotes::install_github("leonawicz/lcars")
In adhering closely to sizing and layout rules for LCARS UI design,
fixed sizing works best for some container widgets like lcarBox()
and
lcarsSweep()
. You can use settings like width = "100%"
for these
containers, but you may notice limitations in maintaining a responsive
UI, particularly when they contain plot outputs. Fixed width widgets are
generally recommended.
Visual components such as the LCARS elbow shape underlying some widgets are intended to follow strict sizing and scaling rules. They are not intended to scale arbitrarily or fit well on very small device screens.
Matthew Leonawicz (2024). lcars: LCARS Aesthetic for Shiny. R package version 0.4.0. https://CRAN.R-project.org/package=lcars
Contributions are welcome. Contribute through GitHub via pull request. Please create an issue first if it is regarding any substantive feature add or change.
Please note that the lcars
project is released with a Contributor
Code of
Conduct.
By contributing to this project, you agree to abide by its terms.