I recommend trying the DataCache package by Jason Bryer. The package is available through GitHub and I was successful in using it today for a Shiny app that I am developing.
The main function from that package is data.cache
. You will need to a define a function that generates a list of objects that you want to cache, and then pass the function you define as an argument to data.cache
. I also recommend setting the cache.name
parameter of data.cache
if you intend on caching more than one list of objects in your application.
For example:
DataCache::data.cache(
function(){
list(
normal_random_numbers = rnorm(10),
uniform_random_numbers = runif(10)
)
},
cache.name = 'my_random_numbers'
)
The above code creates two objects in the local environment, normal_random_numbers
and uniform_random_numbers
, as well as caches these to the file system. When you run this code again, the cached copies of these objects will be used rather than being regenerated - unless of course the cache expires. The frequency
parameter of data.cache
is used to set the expiry of the cache, which is set to daily
by default.
If you are running the application under Windows then use this slightly modified version of the package. This is to address--- a bug that is apparently due to the cache filename being incompatible with the Windows file system.
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