Apostolos
Apostolos

Reputation: 101

gwidgets gtable refresh

I encounter the following problem:

library(gWidgets)
options(guiToolkit = "RGtk2")

aa <- c(1,2,3)
bb <- c(4,5,6)
cc <- cbind(aa,bb)
cc <-as.data.frame(cc)

t1 <- gtable(cc, container=TRUE)

I want to refresh the content of t1 with:

dd <- c(7,8,9)
dd <- as.data.frame(dd)

But when I run

t1[] <- dd

I receive: Can't replace with fewer columns

Apostolos

Upvotes: 8

Views: 1426

Answers (3)

petermeissner
petermeissner

Reputation: 12860

If it is only about refreshing instead of completely changing its content I made very nice experience with something like this:

win <- gtable(data.frame(a=rnorm(100),b=runif(100)),container=T)
win[1,1] <- 5
win[1:10,2] <- 6
win[seq(dim(win)[1]),seq(dim(win)[2])] <- win[seq(dim(win)[1]),seq(dim(win)[2])] +1 

a complete 'refresh' might look like this:

win <- gtable(data.frame(a=rnorm(100),b=runif(100),d=FALSE),container=T)

Upvotes: 0

Richie Cotton
Richie Cotton

Reputation: 121077

To expand upon John's answer, here's an example.

#Data
cc <- data.frame(aa = 1:3, bb = 4:6)
dd <- data.frame(X = 7:9)

#Wigdets
win <- gwindow()
grp <- ggroup(container = win)
t1 <- gtable(cc, container = grp)

#Refresh widget
delete(grp, t1)
t1 <- gtable(dd, container = grp)

Note that the sample code in the question works fine under gWidgetstcltk; it's a purely GTK issue.

Upvotes: 3

jverzani
jverzani

Reputation: 5700

The gtk widget makes you pick the type of column at construction, so gtable doesn't let you have fewer columns or change column types. If you really want to do this, put the widget in a ggroup container, then delete and add a new widget.

Upvotes: 2

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