Browse free open source R Business Software and projects below. Use the toggles on the left to filter open source R Business Software by OS, license, language, programming language, and project status.

  • Gemini 3 and 200+ AI Models on One Platform Icon
    Gemini 3 and 200+ AI Models on One Platform

    Access Google's best plus Claude, Llama, and Gemma. Fine-tune and deploy from one console.

    Build generative AI apps with Vertex AI. Switch between models without switching platforms.
    Start Free
  • MongoDB Atlas runs apps anywhere Icon
    MongoDB Atlas runs apps anywhere

    Deploy in 115+ regions with the modern database for every enterprise.

    MongoDB Atlas gives you the freedom to build and run modern applications anywhere—across AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud. With global availability in over 115 regions, Atlas lets you deploy close to your users, meet compliance needs, and scale with confidence across any geography.
    Start Free
  • 1
    ggplot2

    ggplot2

    An implementation of the Grammar of Graphics in R

    ggplot2 is a system written in R for declaratively creating graphics. It is based on The Grammar of Graphics, which focuses on following a layered approach to describe and construct visualizations or graphics in a structured manner. With ggplot2 you simply provide the data, tell ggplot2 how to map variables to aesthetics, what graphical primitives to use, and it will take care of the rest. ggplot2 is over 10 years old and is used by hundreds of thousands of people all over the world for plotting. In most cases using ggplot2 starts with supplying a dataset and aesthetic mapping (with aes()); adding on layers (like geom_point() or geom_histogram()), scales (like scale_colour_brewer()), and faceting specifications (like facet_wrap()); and finally, coordinating systems. ggplot2 has a rich ecosystem of community-maintained extensions for those looking for more innovation. ggplot2 is a part of the tidyverse, an ecosystem of R packages designed for data science.
    Downloads: 34 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 2
    LabPlot

    LabPlot

    Data Visualization and Analysis

    LabPlot is a FREE, open source and cross-platform Data Visualization and Analysis software accessible to everyone.
    Downloads: 44 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 3
    JuliaConnectoR

    JuliaConnectoR

    A functionally oriented interface for calling Julia from R

    This R-package provides a functionally oriented interface between R and Julia. The goal is to call functions from Julia packages directly as R functions. Julia functions imported via the JuliaConnectoR can accept and return R variables. It is also possible to pass R functions as arguments in place of Julia functions, which allows callbacks from Julia to R. From a technical perspective, R data structures are serialized with an optimized custom streaming format, sent to a (local) Julia TCP server, and translated to Julia data structures by Julia. The results of function calls are likewise translated back to R. Complex Julia structures can either be used by reference via proxy objects in R or fully translated to R data structures.
    Downloads: 6 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 4
    pointblank

    pointblank

    Data quality assessment and metadata reporting for data frames

    With the pointblank package it’s really easy to methodically validate your data whether in the form of data frames or as database tables. On top of the validation toolset, the package gives you the means to provide and keep up-to-date with the information that defines your tables. For table validation, the agent object works with a large collection of simple (yet powerful!) validation functions. We can enable much more sophisticated validation checks by using custom expressions, segmenting the data, and by selective mutations of the target table. The suite of validation functions ensures that everything just works no matter whether your table is a data frame or a database table. Sometimes, we want to maintain table information and update it when the table goes through changes. For that, we can use an informant object plus associated functions to help define the metadata entries and present it as a data dictionary.
    Downloads: 6 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • Forever Free Full-Stack Observability | Grafana Cloud Icon
    Forever Free Full-Stack Observability | Grafana Cloud

    Our generous forever free tier includes the full platform, including the AI Assistant, for 3 users with 10k metrics, 50GB logs, and 50GB traces.

    Built on open standards like Prometheus and OpenTelemetry, Grafana Cloud includes Kubernetes Monitoring, Application Observability, Incident Response, plus the AI-powered Grafana Assistant. Get started with our generous free tier today.
    Create free account
  • 5
    rmarkdown

    rmarkdown

    Dynamic Documents for R

    R Markdown is an R package for creating dynamic, reproducible documents that combine code (R, Python, SQL, etc.), results (figures, tables), and narrative text. Built on Knitr and Pandoc, it supports generating HTML, PDF, Word, slideshows, dashboards, and more. It’s widely used in data science and reproducible reporting workflows.
    Downloads: 5 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 6
    esquisse

    esquisse

    RStudio add-in to make plots interactively with ggplot2

    The purpose of this add-in is to let you explore your data quickly to extract the information they hold. You can create visualization with {ggplot2}, filter data with {dplyr} and retrieve generated code. This addin allows you to interactively explore your data by visualizing it with the ggplot2 package. It allows you to draw bar plots, curves, scatter plots, histograms, boxplot and sf objects, then export the graph or retrieve the code to reproduce the graph. This addin allows you to interactively explore your data by visualizing it with the ggplot2 package. It allows you to draw bar plots, curves, scatter plots, histograms, boxplot and sf objects, then export the graph or retrieve the code to reproduce the graph.
    Downloads: 4 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 7
    Data Science Specialization

    Data Science Specialization

    Course materials for the Data Science Specialization on Coursera

    The Data Science Specialization Courses repository is a collection of materials that support the Johns Hopkins University Data Science Specialization on Coursera. It contains the source code and resources used throughout the specialization’s courses, covering a broad range of data science concepts and techniques. The repository is designed as a shared space for code examples, datasets, and instructional materials, helping learners follow along with lectures and assignments. It spans essential topics such as R programming, data cleaning, exploratory data analysis, statistical inference, regression models, machine learning, and practical data science projects. By providing centralized resources, the repo makes it easier for students to practice concepts and replicate examples from the curriculum. It also offers a structured view of how multiple disciplines—programming, statistics, and applied data analysis—come together in a professional workflow.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 8
    clusterProfiler

    clusterProfiler

    A universal enrichment tool for interpreting omics data

    clusterProfiler is an R/Bioconductor package that provides a unified workflow for functional enrichment analysis to interpret high-throughput omics results. It supports both over-representation analysis and gene set enrichment analysis, letting you work with unranked gene lists or ranked statistics from differential pipelines. The package connects to multiple knowledge bases—such as Gene Ontology, KEGG, Reactome, Disease Ontology, MeSH and others—through a consistent interface so you can query different biological lenses without rewriting code. It is designed for breadth, covering coding and non-coding features and thousands of organisms by leveraging continuously updated annotations. Results are returned in tidy, manipulation-friendly structures and pair naturally with rich visualization functions (via companion tooling) to summarize pathways, terms, and gene–set relationships.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 9
    covid19model

    covid19model

    Code for modelling estimated deaths and cases for COVID19

    Code for modeling estimated deaths and infections for COVID-19 from "Estimating the effects of non-pharmaceutical interventions on COVID-19 in Europe", Flaxman, Mishra, Gandy et al, Nature, 2020, the published version of our original Report 13. This is the release related to our Tiers paper, where we use the latent factor model to estimate the effectiveness of tiers systems in England. Peer-reviewed version is to be out soon. All other code is still the same for previous releases. The code should be run in full mode to obtain credible results. Not running a full run to estimate anything is not recommended and discouraged. Only a full run should be used to get results.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • $300 in Free Credit Towards Top Cloud Services Icon
    $300 in Free Credit Towards Top Cloud Services

    Build VMs, containers, AI, databases, storage—all in one place.

    Start your project in minutes. After credits run out, 20+ products include free monthly usage. Only pay when you're ready to scale.
    Get Started
  • 10
    gt R

    gt R

    Easily generate information-rich, publication-quality tables from R

    With the gt package, anyone can make wonderful-looking tables using the R programming language. The gt philosophy: we can construct a wide variety of useful tables with a cohesive set of table parts. These include the table header, the stub, the column labels and spanner column labels, the table body, and the table footer. It all begins with table data (be it a tibble or a data frame). You then decide how to compose your gt table with the elements and formatting you need for the task at hand. Finally, the table is rendered by printing it at the console, including it in an R Markdown document, or exporting it to a file using gtsave(). Currently, gt supports the HTML, LaTeX, and RTF output formats.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 11
    sf (Simple Features)

    sf (Simple Features)

    Simple Features for R

    sf is an R package that implements “simple features” (standardized vector spatial data) for R. It allows spatial vector data (points, lines, polygons etc.) to be represented as records in data frames (or tibbles) with geometry list columns, and performs spatial operations (geometry operations, coordinate reference system transformations, reading/writing spatial data, integration with spatial databases etc.). It interfaces to GDAL, GEOS, PROJ libraries for robust operations. Reading and writing spatial vector data via many file formats/drivers through GDAL, and spatial databases (PostGIS etc.) Supports all standard simple feature geometry types (points, linestrings, polygons, multi-geometries etc.) in various dimensions (XY, XYZ, XYM, XYZM).
    Downloads: 2 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 12
    forecast

    forecast

    Forecasting Functions for Time Series and Linear Models

    The forecast package is a comprehensive R package for time series analysis and forecasting. It provides functions for building, assessing, and using univariate forecasting models (e.g. ARIMA, exponential smoothing, etc.), tools for automatic model selection, diagnostics, plotting, forecasting future values, etc. It's widely used in statistics, economics, business forecasting, environmental science, etc. Exponential smoothing state space models (ETS) including seasonal components. Residual checks, model accuracy, plots, forecast error measures etc.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 13
    gtsummary

    gtsummary

    Presentation-Ready Data Summary and Analytic Result Tables

    gtsummary is an R package for creating elegant, customizable, publication-ready summary tables of datasets and statistical models. It provides concise code to produce demographic tables (tbl_summary()), regression result tables, and more, with flexible styling options for reporting.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 14
    plotly

    plotly

    An interactive graphing library for R

    This part of the book teaches you how to leverage the plotly R package to create a variety of interactive graphics. There are two main ways to creating a plotly object: either by transforming a ggplot2 object (via ggplotly()) into a plotly object or by directly initializing a plotly object with plot_ly()/plot_geo()/plot_mapbox(). Both approaches have somewhat complementary strengths and weaknesses, so it can pay off to learn both approaches. Moreover, both approaches are an implementation of the Grammar of Graphics and both are powered by the JavaScript graphing library plotly.js, so many of the same concepts and tools that you learn for one interface can be reused in the other. Any graph made with the plotly R package is powered by the JavaScript library plotly.js. The plot_ly() function provides a ‘direct’ interface to plotly.js with some additional abstractions to help reduce typing.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 15
    posterdown

    posterdown

    Use RMarkdown to generate PDF Conference Posters via HTML

    Welcome to Posterdown! This is my attempt to provide a semi-smooth workflow for those who wish to take their RMarkdown skills to the conference world. Many creature comforts from RMarkdown are available in this package such as Markdown section notation, figure captioning, and even citations like this one (Allaire, Xie, McPherson, et al. 2018). The rest of this example poster will show how you can insert typical conference poster features into your own document. Posterdown was created as a proof-of-concept (to myself) that it is possible to make a beautiful poster using open-source reproducible code.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 16
    ComplexHeatmap

    ComplexHeatmap

    Make Complex Heatmaps

    ComplexHeatmap is an R/Bioconductor package by Zuguang Gu et al. designed to create highly flexible, complex, richly annotated heatmaps and related visualizations. It allows arranging multiple heatmaps, adding annotations, combining heatmaps, customizing colors, layouts, and integrating other plots. Often used in genomics/bioinformatics to show expression, methylation, etc., with sidebars, annotations, clustering, etc. Highly customizable layout: combining different heatmaps, arranging and splitting, dealing with multiple heatmap merges, combining with other plots etc. Integration with Shiny / interactive heatmaps via companion packages (InteractiveComplexHeatmap) to allow interactivity, etc.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 17
    No-code system is for the visual creation of structural-functional models and the automatic generation of R language simulation models. The program can be used to describe information, production, organizational, and other processes. For graphical representation, the EdPM/EPM notation is used, which allowed us to implement: - structural-functional modeling using graphical methods; - the study of the efficiency of structural-functional models using simulation methods, that allow (e.g. unlike Petri nets) to process queries in groups, which is important for the study of the efficiency of using such methods as volumetric calendar planning and AI methods in process activities, since the operating time of these methods depends on the number of parameters and changes nonlinearly; - the study of multiprocess systems; - the results were obtained, that allow you to find efficient topologies of structural-functional models.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 18
    FAST-GHG

    FAST-GHG

    A fast tool to caculatate greenhouse gases in agriculture

    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 19
    FriendsDon'tLetFriends

    FriendsDon'tLetFriends

    Friends don't let friends make certain types of data visualization

    Friends don't let friends make certain types of data visualization - What are they and why are they bad.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 20
    Harmony Data Integration

    Harmony Data Integration

    Fast, sensitive and accurate integration of single-cell data

    Harmony is a general-purpose R package with an efficient algorithm for integrating multiple data sets. It is especially useful for large single-cell datasets such as single-cell RNA-seq. Harmony has been tested on R versions =4. Please consult the DESCRIPTION file for more details on required R packages. Harmony has been tested on Linux, OS X, and Windows platforms.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 21
    MHNs Data Science Examples

    MHNs Data Science Examples

    Collection of data science examples.

    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 22
    OmicSelector

    OmicSelector

    Feature selection and deep learning modeling for omic biomarker study

    OmicSelector is an environment, Docker-based web application, and R package for biomarker signature selection (feature selection) from high-throughput experiments and others. It was initially developed for miRNA-seq (small RNA, smRNA-seq; hence the name was miRNAselector), RNA-seq and qPCR, but can be applied for every problem where numeric features should be selected to counteract overfitting of the models. Using our tool, you can choose features, like miRNAs, with the most significant diagnostic potential (based on the results of miRNA-seq, for validation in qPCR experiments).
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 23
    Reproducible-research

    Reproducible-research

    A Reproducible Data Analysis Workflow with R Markdown, Git, Make, etc.

    In this tutorial, we describe a workflow to ensure long-term reproducibility of R-based data analyses. The workflow leverages established tools and practices from software engineering. It combines the benefits of various open-source software tools including R Markdown, Git, Make, and Docker, whose interplay ensures seamless integration of version management, dynamic report generation conforming to various journal styles, and full cross-platform and long-term computational reproducibility. The workflow ensures meeting the primary goals that 1) the reporting of statistical results is consistent with the actual statistical results (dynamic report generation), 2) the analysis exactly reproduces at a later point in time even if the computing platform or software is changed (computational reproducibility), and 3) changes at any time (during development and post-publication) are tracked, tagged, and documented while earlier versions of both data and code remain accessible.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 24
    Wes Anderson Palettes

    Wes Anderson Palettes

    A Wes Anderson color palette for R

    Tired of generic mass produced palettes for your plots? Short of adding an owl and dressing up your plot in a bowler hat, here’s the most indie thing you can do to one. The first round of palettes derived from the amazing Tumblr blog Wes Anderson Palettes.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 25
    brms

    brms

    brms R package for Bayesian generalized multivariate models using Stan

    brms is an R package by Paul Bürkner which provides a high-level interface for fitting Bayesian multilevel (i.e. mixed effects) models, generalized linear / non-linear / multivariate models using Stan as the backend. It allows R users to specify complex Bayesian models using formula syntax similar to lme4 but with far more flexibility (distributions, link functions, hierarchical structure, nonlinear terms, etc.). It supports model diagnostics, posterior predictive checking, model comparison, custom priors, and advanced features such as distributional regression.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • Previous
  • You're on page 1
  • 2
  • Next
MongoDB Logo MongoDB