hello, thank you for your answer! yes, now it is working! marion 2011/9/19 Duncan Murdoch <murdoch.dun...@gmail.com>
> On 11-09-19 7:30 AM, Marion Wenty wrote: > >> Hello, >> >> could someone help me with this problem?: >> >> I would like to create a latex-script inside of a character vector in >> order >> to being able to compilate it within latex in the end. >> >> if i try the following commands: >> >> l1<- "Hello world" >> latexscript<- paste("\c",l1,"\c") >> >> ... I get an error message. I think the problem is that r sees \c as a >> command. >> >> How can I get >> >> "\c Hello world \c" >> >> as a result without getting the error message? >> > > Here's the long answer: > > R uses \ as an "escape character", which is different from the way LaTeX > uses it. The string "\n" contains a single character (a newline character. > When you say "\c", the parser thinks you are asking for a single character > which is written as \c, but there isn't one, so you get the error message. > > To put the characters \c into a string, you need to escape the backslash, > i.e. use "\\c". That's a two character string. It will print as "\\c" > using print(), but if you use cat() you will see the actual characters \c. > > The short answer is: > > > latexscript <- paste("\\c", l1, "\\c") > cat(latexscript, "\n") > > Duncan Murdoch > [[alternative HTML version deleted]] ______________________________________________ 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.