

It would probably be beneficial to understand those ideas at a high level from a generic web application standpoint rather than strictly through Shiny, as well.

The Shiny homepage has a ton of useful articles on many of those items and there are a bunch of great tutorials around the web on others. caching static assets, caching data, and load balancing.monitoring usage, uptime and performance.continuous integration & continuous development (CI/CD).web app design and recommended layouts for different objectives.web programming fundamentals and best practice.Ideally, in addition to the many chapters on the various aspects of Shiny itself it would include chapters on: In my opinion, that would need to cover more than just how the Shiny web framework works. I also think a good Shiny book would be a beast to write. Newer and a bit expensive, though with only three reviews:Ī good, modern book on developing, deploying, and maintaining Shiny web applications would be really interesting and probably a very useful contribution to the R community. Web Application Development with R using Shiny - Second Edition.There are a couple book on developing Shiny apps on Amazon, but I have not looked into either of them.
