standby offers several types of loading screens for Shiny apps. This document is a quickstart guide for using standby in your Shiny applications. Let us look at a simple example below:
library(shiny)
library(standby)
ui <- fluidPage(
  standby::useSpinkit(), # include dependencies
  fluidRow(
    standby::spinkit(plotOutput("plot1")), # wrap output inside loader
    actionButton("render", "Render")
  )
)
server <- function(input, output, session) {
    output$plot1 <- renderPlot({
      input$render
      Sys.sleep(3)
      hist(mtcars$mpg)
    })
}
shinyApp(ui, server)To use spinners/loaders from standby in your Shiny application, include the following in the UI part of the app:
use*
functions (useSpinkit() in the above example).spinkit() in the above example).The below table displays the dependency and rendering functions along with references:
| Index | Dependency | Render | Reference | 
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | useThreeDots() | threeDots() | https://github.com/nzbin/three-dots | 
| 2 | useSpinkit() | spinkit() | https://github.com/tobiasahlin/SpinKit | 
| 3 | useVizLoad() | vizLoad() | https://github.com/RIDICS/Loading-Visualization | 
| 4 | useSpinners() | spinners() | https://github.com/lukehaas/css-loaders | 
| 5 | useLoaders() | loaders() | https://github.com/raphaelfabeni/css-loader | 
Visit the documentation to learn how to customize the alerts and notifications.