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Interactive Dashboards and Data Apps with Plotly and Dash

You're reading from   Interactive Dashboards and Data Apps with Plotly and Dash Harness the power of a fully fledged frontend web framework in Python – no JavaScript required

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800568914
Length 364 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Elias Dabbas Elias Dabbas
Author Profile Icon Elias Dabbas
Elias Dabbas
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Building a Dash App
2. Chapter 1: Overview of the Dash Ecosystem FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Exploring the Structure of a Dash App 4. Chapter 3: Working with Plotly's Figure Objects 5. Chapter 4: Data Manipulation and Preparation, Paving the Way to Plotly Express 6. Section 2: Adding Functionality to Your App with Real Data
7. Chapter 5: Interactively Comparing Values with Bar Charts and Dropdown Menus 8. Chapter 6: Exploring Variables with Scatter Plots and Filtering Subsets with Sliders 9. Chapter 7: Exploring Map Plots and Enriching Your Dashboards with Markdown 10. Chapter 8: Calculating the Frequency of Your Data with Histograms and Building Interactive Tables 11. Section 3: Taking Your App to the Next Level
12. Chapter 9: Letting Your Data Speak for Itself with Machine Learning 13. Chapter 10: Turbo-charge Your Apps with Advanced Callbacks 14. Chapter 11: URLs and Multi-Page Apps 15. Chapter 12: Deploying Your App 16. Chapter 13: Next Steps 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

The id parameter of Dash components

As briefly mentioned in Chapter 1, Overview of the Dash Ecosystem, every Dash component has an id parameter that you can easily set in order to uniquely identify it. There is actually nothing more to this parameter than making sure that your components have unique and descriptive names.

Note

There are more advanced ways of using the id parameter, and they will be tackled in a later, more advanced chapter. However, for now, we will just focus on it being a unique identifier.

Using descriptive and explicit names for the id parameter becomes more important as the app grows in complexity. This parameter is optional when there is no interactivity, but it becomes mandatory when there is. The following example snippet shows how easy it is to set the id parameter for a basic use case:

html.Div([
    html.Div(id='empty_space'),
    html.H2(id='h2_text'),
    dcc.Slider...
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