Note: This site only documents the {surveydown} R package - visit our main site at surveydown.org for more information!
surveydown is a flexible, open-source platform for making surveys with R, Quarto, Shiny, and Supabase.
The basic concept is:
- Design your survey as a Quarto document using markdown and R code.
- Convert your survey into a Shiny app that can be hosted online and sent to respondents.
- Store your survey responses in a Supabase database (or any Postgres database).
The {surveydown} R package provides functions to bring this all together.
See the documentation to get started making your own surveydown survey!
We also recommend working with an IDE that has good support for R, Quarto, and Shiny. RStudio is great, and we also like VSCode and Positron.
You can install {surveydown} from CRAN in your R console:
install.packages("surveydown")
or you can install the development version from GitHub:
# install.packages("pak")
pak::pak('surveydown-dev/surveydown')
Load the package with:
library(surveydown)
You can also check which version you have installed:
surveydown::sd_version()
Most survey platforms (e.g., Google forms, Qualtrics, etc.) use graphic interfaces to design surveys, making version control and collaboration with others difficult. They’re also not easily reproducible, and many require a paid subscription or license to use.
The surveydown package was designed to address these problems. As an
open-source, markdown-based platform, all survey content is defined with
plain text (markdown and R code) in a survey.qmd
file and an app.R
file that renders your survey into a Shiny app that can be hosted
online. This makes your survey easy to reproduce, share, and version
control with common tools like Git. The researcher also has total
control over the data collected as it is stored in a PostgreSQL database
of their choosing (we recommend Supabase as a free and secure option).
If you’re curious where this whole idea came from, check out this blog post, which outlines more on the general idea and the motivation for it. The post is now outdated in terms of the overall package design, but it provides something of an origin story and some of the motivation for developing this project.
See our todo repo for a running list of things we’re working on / have already added to the project.
If you use this package for in a publication, please cite it! You can
get the citation by typing citation("surveydown")
into R:
citation("surveydown")