This vignette walks the user through some applications of linne.
Shiny developers often want to customise how shiny inputs look and feel, which can be a bother. Let’s say we want to change the label color of the textInput
shiny input.
cat(as.character(shiny::textInput(inputId = "text", "Label")))
#> <div class="form-group shiny-input-container">
#> <label class="control-label" for="text">Label</label>
#> <input id="text" type="text" class="form-control" value=""/>
#> </div>
One might be tempted to only use sel_id('text')
, as demonstrated above, this would not work. We could instead use on of the infix operators select the child tag “label” of the input.
Linne$new()$
rule(
sel_id("text") %child% sel_tag("label"),
color = "#f4a717"
)$show_css()
#> #text label{
#> color:#f4a717;
#> }
Now, just to demonstrate what is possible with CSS, say we want to change the font size of a specific option in a selectInput
.
cat(as.character(shiny::selectInput("select", "Select one:", choices = letters[1:3])))
#> <div class="form-group shiny-input-container">
#> <label class="control-label" for="select">Select one:</label>
#> <div>
#> <select id="select"><option value="a" selected>a</option>
#> <option value="b">b</option>
#> <option value="c">c</option></select>
#> <script type="application/json" data-for="select" data-nonempty="">{}</script>
#> </div>
#> </div>
We can again use a combination of selectors to select say, option “b”, to a different size.
Linne$new()$
rule(
sel_id("select") # inputId = "select"
%child%
sel_attr("value", "b"), # value = 'b'
color = "#f4a717"
)$show_css()
#> #select [value='b']{
#> color:#f4a717;
#> }
A good way to conceptualise the
%child%
operator is to think of it like one uses the pipe in the rvest package or how one might use the pipe in purrr: to gradually but surely go down the tree until the right node is selected.