This text was originally published on the IFPEN forum.
Someone asked me for help styling a parallelPlot
using
the cssRules
argument. In his case, he would like to hide
the slider at the top of the chart.
Let’s see how to find the solution following three steps.
CSS
rule to useWhen we open a parallelPlot
from a R console, it’s in
fact a HTML
page which is created.
HTML
provides the fundamental building blocks for structuring Web documents and apps.
CSS
is used to describe the appearance of Web documents and apps.
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web
To find which CSS
rule to use, we can rely on a search
engine. The main keyword to use is css
. Searching “css hide
element”, the first result points to:
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/visibility
Thanks to the “Try it” section, the interesting option seems to be
visibility: hidden
.
CSS
ruledownload the file mtcars.html and open it with a web browser (firefox will be used here);
place the mouse pointer hover the part of the graph you want to
hide (the top slider) and right click to select ‘Inspect’; (note: when
the inspector is open, as you move the mouse around the elements listed
in the HTML
pane, the corresponding elements are
highlighted in the page)
in the HTML
pane, if this is not already the case,
click the element which seems the highest in the hierarchy and which
seems to correspond to the top slider; it should be
<g class="slider" transform="translate(10,25)">
;
right click and select ‘Attributes/Add attributes’ (or double
click the >
which is at the end of the line) and type
visibility: hidden
as seen in Step 1. The
slider should disappear.
CSS
code to use as
cssRules
argument
CSS
is a rule-based language — you define the rules by specifying groups of styles that should be applied to particular elements or groups of elements on your web page.
To learn more about CSS
, see https://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Learn/CSS/First_steps
The cssRules
argument expects a list of CSS
rules. A CSS
rule has two parts:
a CSS
rule opens with a selector.
In CSS, selectors are patterns used to match, or select, the elements you want to style.
In our example, we want to select the HTML
element
<g class="slider" transform="translate(10,25)">
.
g
stands for “group”, so we wants to select a group with a
class
attribute equals to slider
.
associated to this selector, there are one or more declarations,
which take the form of property and value pairs. In our example, we need
only one declaration, we want to use
visibility: hidden
.
So, in a R console, we can try:
But doing so, we hide to many elements, the displayed graph appears empty, all white. We need to use a more discriminating selector by specifying the class of the targeted group. To specify a class, the operator is the dot (to see the list of existing operators: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/CSS_selectors).
In a R console, we can try:
Bingo!
This time, only the slider is hidden, while the graph itself is clearly visible.