\name{reactiveValues} \alias{reactiveValues} \title{Create an object for storing reactive values} \usage{ reactiveValues(...) } \arguments{ \item{...}{Objects that will be added to the reactivevalues object. All of these objects must be named.} } \description{ This function returns an object for storing reactive values. It is similar to a list, but with special capabilities for reactive programming. When you read a value from it, the calling reactive function takes a reactive dependency on that value, and when you write to it, it notifies any reactive functions that depend on that value. } \examples{ # Create the object with no values values <- reactiveValues() # Assign values to 'a' and 'b' values$a <- 3 values[['b']] <- 4 \dontrun{ # From within a reactive context, you can access values with: values$a values[['a']] } # If not in a reactive context (e.g., at the console), you can use isolate() # to retrieve the value: isolate(values$a) isolate(values[['a']]) # Set values upon creation values <- reactiveValues(a = 1, b = 2) isolate(values$a) } \seealso{ \code{\link{isolate}}. }