r-help-requ...@r-project.org<mailto:r-help-requ...@r-project.org> wrote:
From: Duncan Murdoch mailto:murdoch.dun...@gmail.com>>
Subject: Re: [R] SWEAVE - a gentle introduction
Date: 18 November 2015 08:09:34 NZDT
To: Marc Schwartz mailto:marc_schwa...@me.com>>,
John,
One additional point that I have not seen brought up yet. If your
main goal is to have all the output from an existing R script put into
a single output file then you should look at the `stitch` function in
the knitr package. This will take an existing R script and convert it
to one of the
As a digest reader I am late to the discussion, but let me toss in 2 further
notes.
1. Three advantages of knitr over Sweave
a. The book "Dynamic documents with R and knitr". It is well written; sitting down for
an evening with the first half (70 pages) is a pretty good way to learn the pack
On 17/11/2015 6:56 PM, Henrik Bengtsson wrote:
When choosing source format, it's probably helpful to know that if you
work with a Markdown-based format (e.g. Rmarkdown) you'll be able to
generate either/both HTML or/and PDF documents, whereas if you work
with LaTeX-based formats (e.g. Sweave/knit
When choosing source format, it's probably helpful to know that if you
work with a Markdown-based format (e.g. Rmarkdown) you'll be able to
generate either/both HTML or/and PDF documents, whereas if you work
with LaTeX-based formats (e.g. Sweave/knitr) you will only be able
output PDF documents (at
On 17/11/2015 10:42 AM, Marc Schwartz wrote:
On Nov 17, 2015, at 9:21 AM, John Sorkin wrote:
I am looking for a gentle introduction to SWEAVE, and would appreciate
recommendations.
I have an R program that I want to run and have the output and plots in one
document. I believe this can be ac
I've been very pleased using knitr in combination with LyX for pdf production.
John Kane
Kingston ON Canada
> -Original Message-
> From: jsor...@grecc.umaryland.edu
> Sent: Tue, 17 Nov 2015 10:21:15 -0500
> To: r-help@r-project.org
> Subject: [R] SWEAVE - a gentle
Given that you like a gentle introduction and don't know HTML, I would
recommend rmarkdown in combination with knitr. See
http://rmarkdown.rstudio.com/ for a lot of information.
I find knitr more flexible than sweave. Markdown syntax is much easier than
HTML or latex.
Best regards,
Thierry
Op 17
I suggest using knitr instead of sweave. There are plenty of tutorials
online;
http://jeromyanglim.blogspot.co.nz/2012/05/getting-started-with-r-markdown-knitr.html?m=1
might be a good place to start. Links to a full length book and other
resources are available at
http://yihui.name/knitr/
Best,
> On Nov 17, 2015, at 9:21 AM, John Sorkin wrote:
>
> I am looking for a gentle introduction to SWEAVE, and would appreciate
> recommendations.
> I have an R program that I want to run and have the output and plots in one
> document. I believe this can be accomplished with SWEAVE. Unfortunate
I am looking for a gentle introduction to SWEAVE, and would appreciate
recommendations.
I have an R program that I want to run and have the output and plots in one
document. I believe this can be accomplished with SWEAVE. Unfortunately I don't
know HTML, but am willing to learn. . . as I said I
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