blogdown
Ron Yurko (@Stat_Ron; 7/0): The people have spoken - will strive for same length and include all the code, which is super easy with #blogdown https://t.co/xmAAaPkgi5 ↪
Alex Kruse (@krusealex2013; 5/2): I build and maintain the website completely from @rstudio with the blogdown #rstats package. Publishing is easily done via @Netlify. A great tutorial from @xieyihui can be found here: https://t.co/LaRVNAhD4M ↪
Maëlle Salmon 🐟 (@ma_salmon; 4/0): @xieyihui @grrrck @dataandme The WIP app now seems to work and no longer depends on blogdown… but uses blogdown as.yaml wrapper with a reference. Btw DT helped a lot!
https://t.co/1yixlVTIIZ https://t.co/JpMYLn4phY ↪
Gina Reynolds (@EvaMaeRey; 1/0): @staticum Hi, I thought I responded with something here, but it looks like I didn’t. Sorry! I started to use blogdown and wrote this up as a post, featuring your question (hope you don’t mind) and which contains the full process. https://t.co/w6JXCLyuJJ ↪
Lisa DeBruine 🏳️🌈 (@lisadebruine; 0/0): @Heinonmatti @matherion @gitlab Good idea. If I have time to move my pages soon, I’ll document the process in a tutorial. I’ve been working on one for changing from flat-structured rmarkdown pages to #blogdown, but that process has been more difficult than I anticipated. ↪
Nathan Brouwer (@lobrowR; 0/0): good post on creating course web pages using #github (doesn’t use blogdown and saddly who knows where github its going…)
https://t.co/HQ4yVPRUPC ↪
bookdown
Alex Kruse (@krusealex2013; 5/2): I build and maintain the website completely from @rstudio with the blogdown #rstats package. Publishing is easily done via @Netlify. A great tutorial from @xieyihui can be found here: https://t.co/LaRVNAhD4M ↪
Max Kuhn (@topepos; 3/0): @GoldbergData @pattithepotato @tslevi @BecomingDataSci We’ve started to write in a lot more detail on this subject to try to bridge the gap between where the statisticians and computer scientists are coming from: https://t.co/ypjJKJOE1x ↪
Wei Yang Tham (@wytham88; 1/1): Couple of R Markdown tricks I learned recently:
- if you want to write a pdf that can link to figures/tables, use “bookdown::pdf_document2” and not “pdf_document”
https://t.co/pQuMlITOBw
- The xaringan Infinite Moon reader addin auto-refreshes ANY .rmd html output
#rstats ↪
Alison Hill (@apreshill; 0/0): @sckottie @VickySteeves Might be helpful? https://t.co/0ipShzAMAV ↪
Vicky Steeves (joinmastodon.org) (@VickySteeves; 0/0): #bookdown #rstats friends – is there anyway I can make a collapsing/expanding box for ‘challenges’ in a teaching session?
I know I can do this in gitbook (there’s a plugin) but haven’t had any fruitful searches for bookdown ↪
knitr
Jo Etzel (@JosetAEtzel; 33/10): New tutorial: plotting GIfTI images in R and knitr. https://t.co/fiPtHMGTjR https://t.co/1ocgDW34Hb ↪
David Winter (@TheAtavism; 3/0): @emilynz @kamal_hothi @zentree @aschiff In R, something like knitr::kable(M, “latex”, booktabs=TRUE) makes a nice LaTeX table even if you aren’t using markdown for the doc ↪
Wei Yang Tham (@wytham88; 1/1): Couple of R Markdown tricks I learned recently:
- if you want to write a pdf that can link to figures/tables, use “bookdown::pdf_document2” and not “pdf_document”
https://t.co/pQuMlITOBw
- The xaringan Infinite Moon reader addin auto-refreshes ANY .rmd html output
#rstats ↪
Indie Neuroblogs (@neuroghetto; 0/0): tutorial: plotting GIfTI images in R (knitr) https://t.co/8eZt3jBIM6 https://t.co/hDVGrPZapj ↪
Muhammad Yaseen (@myaseen208; 0/0): @thosjleeper @mdsumner Not forget to mention #knitr ↪
xaringan
Wei Yang Tham (@wytham88; 1/1): Couple of R Markdown tricks I learned recently:
- if you want to write a pdf that can link to figures/tables, use “bookdown::pdf_document2” and not “pdf_document”
https://t.co/pQuMlITOBw
- The xaringan Infinite Moon reader addin auto-refreshes ANY .rmd html output
#rstats ↪