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Save leaflet map in Shiny

Tags:

r

leaflet

shiny

I have created a leaflet map in a Shiny application. Now I need a download button, so that the user can download the currently shown map including all markers, polygons etc. as a pdf file.

I have found this solution how to save a leaflet map in R: How to save Leaflet in R map as png or jpg file?

But how does it work in Shiny? I kept the example code simple, but think of it, as if there were a lot of changes to the map via leafletProxy() before the user wants to save the map as a pdf.

This is my try, but it's not working.

server.R

library(shiny)
library(leaflet)
library(devtools)
install_github("wch/webshot") # first install phantomjs.exe in your directory

library(htmlwidgets)
library(webshot)

server <- function(input, output){

  output$map <- renderLeaflet({
    leaflet() %>% addTiles()
  })

 observe({
    if(input$returnpdf == TRUE){
      m <- leafletProxy("map")
      saveWidget(m, "temp.html", selfcontained = FALSE)
      webshot("temp.html", file = "plot.pdf", cliprect = "viewport")
    }
  })

  output$pdflink <- downloadHandler(
    filename <- "map.pdf",
    content <- function(file) {
      file.copy("plot.pdf", file)
    }
  )
}

ui.R

ui <- fluidPage(
     sidebarPanel(
     checkboxInput('returnpdf', 'output pdf?', FALSE), 
     conditionalPanel(
       condition = "input.returnpdf == true",
       downloadLink('pdflink')
      ) 
     ), 
     mainPanel(leafletOutput("map"))
)
like image 683
needRhelp Avatar asked Feb 13 '16 19:02

needRhelp


People also ask

How to save a leaflet map in Shiny?

Once you run the Shiny app, open the app in a new window. Once in the browser, go ahead and click Download . It took about ~3 seconds. Once Download has been clicked, you'll promptly see a PDF file wherever your downloaded files are stored on your machine.


1 Answers

I have updated my previous answer to make it more clear and illustrate how to use mapshot from package mapview. Moreover, following Jake's question below, I noticed that it might be necessary to specify a link to a tile (within addTiles), or the map might be downloaded with a grey background.

Server

server = function(input, output){

    mymap <- reactive({
      # here I have specified a tile from openstreetmap
      leaflet() %>% addTiles('http://{s}.tile.openstreetmap.de/tiles/osmde/{z}/{x}/{y}.png')
    })

    output$map <- renderLeaflet({
      mymap()
    })

    # function with all the features that we want to add to the map
    myfun <- function(map){
      addCircles(map,12.5,42,radius=500) %>% addMarkers(12,42,popup="Rome")
    }

    observe({
      leafletProxy("map") %>% myfun()
    })

    # map that will be downloaded
    mapdown <- reactive({
      # we need to specify coordinates (and zoom level) that we are currently viewing
      bounds <- input$map_bounds
      latRng <- range(bounds$north, bounds$south)
      lngRng <- range(bounds$east, bounds$west)
      mymap() %>% myfun() %>% setView(lng = (lngRng[1]+lngRng[2])/2, lat = (latRng[1]+latRng[2])/2, zoom = input$map_zoom)
    })

    output$map_down <- downloadHandler(
      filename = 'mymap.pdf',

      content = function(file) {
        # temporarily switch to the temp dir, in case you do not have write
        # permission to the current working directory
        owd <- setwd(tempdir())
        on.exit(setwd(owd))

        # using saveWidget and webshot (old)
        saveWidget(mapdown(), "temp.html", selfcontained = FALSE)
        webshot("temp.html", file = file, cliprect = "viewport")

        # using mapshot we can substitute the above two lines of code
        # mapshot(mapdown(), file = file, cliprect = "viewport")
      }
    )
  }

UI

ui <- fluidPage(
     sidebarPanel(
     checkboxInput('returnpdf', 'output pdf?', FALSE), 
     conditionalPanel(
       condition = "input.returnpdf == true",
       downloadButton('map_down')
      ) 
     ), 
     mainPanel(leafletOutput("map"))

)

like image 95
Davide Avatar answered Sep 20 '22 16:09

Davide