This should be used when you want to let the user see an error
message even if the default is to sanitize all errors. If you have an
error e
and call stop(safeError(e))
, then Shiny will
ignore the value of getOption("shiny.sanitize.errors")
and always
display the error in the app itself.
safeError(error)
error | Either an "error" object or a "character" object (string).
In the latter case, the string will become the message of the error
returned by |
---|
An "error" object
An error generated by safeError
has priority over all
other Shiny errors. This can be dangerous. For example, if you have set
options(shiny.sanitize.errors = TRUE)
, then by default all error
messages are omitted in the app, and replaced by a generic error message.
However, this does not apply to safeError
: whatever you pass
through error
will be displayed to the user. So, this should only
be used when you are sure that your error message does not contain any
sensitive information. In those situations, safeError
can make
your users' lives much easier by giving them a hint as to where the
error occurred.
## Only run examples in interactive R sessions if (interactive()) { # uncomment the desired line to experiment with shiny.sanitize.errors # options(shiny.sanitize.errors = TRUE) # options(shiny.sanitize.errors = FALSE) # Define UI ui <- fluidPage( textInput('number', 'Enter your favorite number from 1 to 10', '5'), textOutput('normalError'), textOutput('safeError') ) # Server logic server <- function(input, output) { output$normalError <- renderText({ number <- input$number if (number %in% 1:10) { return(paste('You chose', number, '!')) } else { stop( paste(number, 'is not a number between 1 and 10') ) } }) output$safeError <- renderText({ number <- input$number if (number %in% 1:10) { return(paste('You chose', number, '!')) } else { stop(safeError( paste(number, 'is not a number between 1 and 10') )) } }) } # Complete app with UI and server components shinyApp(ui, server) }