>Kevin,
Your suggestion got me on the right track. The R command: option(width=50), sets the text width for R to 50 columns per line. When Sweave is run it breaks lines into 50 columns per line. The only exception to this is when there is a command like setwd("/Users/keithjones/Documents/DataFiles/TexasTechhd/Dissertation II/MathematicaFiles/PointPatternAnalysis/") it keeps the line in one piece. It will not break a line in between the quotes in a line. I will have to do that myself. 95% of the lines coded is a lot better then none. Thanks, Keith Jones >Keith Jones wrote: >> Hello, >> >> I am trying to add R code to my dissertation and the length of a line >> of text that Sweave generates is longer than the right margin in my >> dissertation. I have found no way to tell Sweave how to set the line >> length. I am using an iMac with tiger ver. 10.4.10, and R: ver. >> 2.5.1. Here is the R code that is longer than my right margin: >> >> input to Sweave: >> legend("topleft",c("obs", "theo","hi","lo"),lty = >> c(1,2,3,4),col=c(1,2,6,4,0), cex=1.5,pt.cex=c(3,6), bty='o',inset=.05) >> >> output from Sweave: >>> legend("topleft", c("obs", "theo", "hi", "lo"), lty = c(1, 2, 3, >>> 4), col = c(1, >> + 2, 6, 4, 0), cex = 1.5, pt.cex = c(3, 6), bty = "o", inset = 0.05) >> >> The line is about eleven (11) characters too long. >> >> Thanks, >> >> Keith Jones >> > >I'm not sure if it affects the echoed commands too, but inserting a code >chunk like > ><<>> >options(width=60) >@ > >(replace 60 with the width you need) controls the width of the R output. > > >-- >Kevin E. Thorpe >Biostatistician/Trialist, Knowledge Translation Program >Assistant Professor, Department of Public Health Sciences >Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto >email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Tel: 416.864.5776 Fax: 416.864.6057 ______________________________________________ R-help@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.