blogdown
Tom Carpenter (@tcarpenter216; 9/1): I want to make a website using ‘blogdown’. I have the CRC book, but does anyone have a tutorial they recommend? ↪
Jennifer Thompson (@jent103; 8/0): @kearneymw @apreshill’s is real good: https://t.co/TYcDExJSnm ↪
Thomas @ Strata Data NY - RStudio Booth (@thomas_mock; 7/1): @tcarpenter216 https://t.co/ezQWn31Xz8 by @apreshill ! ↪
Daniel Anderson (@datalorax_; 3/0): @jent103 @kearneymw @apreshill Her slides are great as well: https://t.co/2eBvHIsB46 ↪
Hao Ye (@Hao_and_Y; 2/1): @sabahzero I use R, so… blogdown + plotly is the way to go. Here’s an example:
https://t.co/watQZU9NIa ↪
Niklas Johannes (@NiklasJohannes; 2/0): @tcarpenter216 I found this extremely helpful and followed most of it: https://t.co/gW7hj7uSV1 ↪
Sabah Ul-Hasan (@sabahzero; 1/0): @Hao_and_Y I’ve really been going back and forth on blogdown. Is there an advantage besides it being in R for those already familiar with it? I feel like a lot of R is still a bit clunky for some of the visuals I’d like to do but also new to it so maybe “impatient” is a better adjective. ↪
timelyportfolio (@timelyportfolio; 0/0): @symbolixAU Need to update and convert to blogdown. Thanks! ↪
Andrew Heiss, PhD (@andrewheiss; 0/0): @kearneymw But the weird thing is that this never happened in any of my blogdown sites last fall and spring, and they all use index. Maybe something changed in blogdown? ¯_(ツ)/¯ ↪
bookdown
Irshaad Vawda (@irshaadv; 1/0): @jenterysayers Super interesting content, but I have to ask - is this page made with #bookdown’s Tufte style?
Very cool layout! ↪
Mike K Smith (@MikeKSmith; 1/0): @HoneycombBethan Start here for technical stuff: https://t.co/s0thHepUMe ↪
Carlos (@coforfe; 0/0): Courtesy of Max Kuhn …
https://t.co/hOYHHkX7Sg https://t.co/Biburaiage ↪
knitr
annakrystalli (@annakrystalli; 2/0): @CMastication @nj_tierney In Rmd, I might occassionally present code that lives in .R scripts but import them with knitr::read_chunk. That’s way I only have one copy of the code to curate but can present inner workings of a workflow if required. ↪
xaringan
Suzan Baert (@SuzanBaert; 48/13): Another #xaringan tip: if you’re like me and half the time you press enter rather than the arrows to go to the next slide, you can add this to your YAML and your enter action will actually do something… #rstats https://t.co/re3mc6Ps3R ↪
Carlisle Rainey (@carlislerainey; 3/0): This is my first try with xaringan from @xieyihui. I prefer Keynote, but R Markdown is much easier for slides with R code and (especially) output.
https://t.co/NP1mHLLd0d ↪
Mike Kearney📊 (@kearneymw; 0/0): @andrewheiss I get all sorts of weird parsing inconsistencies with xaringan depending on where my cursor is located when I knit. Could cursor location explain it? ↪
Suzan Baert (@SuzanBaert; 0/0): @ma_salmon @fusionet24 @hrbrmstr I was just wondering about this yesterday: i wanted to make all my material in xaringan but that means that every time I knit i send out the same API calls. Any fix except for temporary eval=FALSE ? ↪
yihui.name
Daniel Kim (@pybokeh; 6/2): As a data analyst who doesnt do s/w engineering, I really enjoyed this blog by core R developer who I think did a good job responding to Joel Grus complaints about jupyter notebooks #jupyter #rstats https://t.co/EwuoS74IbO ↪
kazutan (@kazutan; 5/1): あとでよむ。
https://t.co/X2M8zbEwSQ ↪
Etienne DELAY (@ElCep; 3/0): A discutions about jupiter and other notebook… https://t.co/b7L9Tmlb7D #Esug18 ↪
Frederic (@_mhacker; 2/2): #notebook #rstats https://t.co/aCozbd1KaI IMO, nice engineering workflow & research habit are more important than tools. Rmd is good enough for technical writing & reproducible document. And it would be more perfect if RStudio support other language’s kernel in its console. ↪
mathieu rajerison (@datagistips; 0/1): ☝️J’aime bien cette citation de @xieyihui
“There seems to be a strong atmosphere of software engineering in the Python world: in the beginning was the custom class (with methods). For R users, in the beginning was the data.”
https://t.co/nlADJ7uFAs
#python #rstats ↪
data_sciesotist (@data_sciesotist; 0/0): 第一次ノートブック戦争、勃発。|The First Notebook War - So Joel Grus doesn’t like Jupyter notebooks. Here are some of my thoughts on notebooks, IDE, and R Markdown. - Yihui Xie | 谢益辉 https://t.co/DqviAoiunA ↪
Tony Hirst (@psychemedia; 0/0): Interesting… “The First Notebook War” https://t.co/NuXFJggrDv ↪
Dr Alan Beckles (@Ritmonegro; 0/0): https://t.co/qhmDdzx2O3 ↪
ucdatalab (@ucdatalab; 0/0): Nice @xieyihui. A thoughtful and nuanced take on notebooks 🙌
https://t.co/Z9B0XertU9 ↪
Benjamin Campbell (@B_W_Campbell; 0/0): @xieyihui on the turn to notebooks from an R Markdown perspective: https://t.co/uLA1kwxaoG ↪
Galahad (@quipsy; 0/0): “There seems to be a strong atmosphere of software engineering in the Python world: in the beginning was the custom class(with methods). For R users, in the beginning was the data.”
https://t.co/RpV7aKUshJ ↪
Carlos (@coforfe; 0/0): Notebook here, notebook there… are we fully sure?… https://t.co/g9ZYx8M05s ↪
guillermo.d (@gds506; 0/0): “There seems to be a strong atmosphere of software engineering in the Python world: in the beginning was the custom class(with methods). For R users, in the beginning was the data.” https://t.co/d4qtrKK26y #DataScience ↪
Choi Shing Wan (@shing_wan; 0/0): This also seems helpful https://t.co/QUMJamnvU9 ↪
Yann Abraham (@yannabraham; 0/0): Interesting take on notebooks vs IDE https://t.co/h1IHiqk93a ↪
Nathanael Aff (@nateaff; 0/0): also see @xieyihui(of Rmarkdown fame)’s “The First Notebook War”, a longish reflection on the “I don’t like (Jupyter) notebooks” talk https://t.co/kQeIgvr1Ho ↪