I don’t know what I’m more pleased with - the fact that I finally forced myself to start working on this horrible horrible tutorial, or that I managed to learn the basics of @statsgen’s magnificent kunoichi theme for xaringan! 😍 https://t.co/qGJl6T2f7O

2018/12/01

blogdown

Ilja (@fubits; 7/0): So in conclusion, @xieyihui‘s #blogdown resonates very well with everyone! Lot’s of 😮 faces after we launched a website with 3 lines of code 😈. Even Pythonistas want to convert now.

Slides from my talk at yesterday’s Berlin #Rstats User Group Meetup: https://t.co/U08y4vvm6L https://t.co/YQuNXqe3zJ

Elizabeth Morin-Lessard (@emorinlessard; 3/1): I’ve been wanting to revamp my personal academic website and came across this awesome “tweetorial” by @dsquintana. Websites can be created for free using the blogdown R package. Bonus: Changes can be visualized as you tweak the code in @rstudio. I’m sold! #AcademicTwitter https://t.co/HZPUrbzb5L

Yihui Xie (@xieyihui; 3/1): @fubits @Dale_Masch @mdsumner @djnavarro No need to test: it doesn’t work at the moment without hacking at JS by yourself :) See https://t.co/rjnHWiBC22

Jacquie Tran (@jacquietran; 0/0): @StatsbyLopez Hi Michael, your blogdown site looks great! I’m wondering whether there is an easy way to access your older blog posts? When I click on the ‘More Posts’ link from the home page, I get a blank page: https://t.co/5JfjT0FoBj

Blake Shaffer 📊 (@bcshaffer; 0/0): @SimonKiss1 That is a really slick website!

I’m really liking hugo academic/blogdown so far. A bit of a learning curve (I knew no markdown or yaml, still don’t really…). But seems like it will be really useful for sharing work.

bookdown

tipsder (@tipsder; 8/5): ¡Más de 200 libros en formato web y en diversos idiomas para el aprendizaje de #R! Los hay, para todos los gustos, en diversos colores, olores y sabores.
https://t.co/8AVwCjBzYK
#rstats
#DataScience
#dataviz
#data
#rstatsES
#bookdown https://t.co/Y0ONWopppJ

knitr

Jeremy Kahn (@trochee; 4/0): @VerbingNouns @joshraclaw R is probably the “language” best described as a collection of “jacquards” “cross-stitch” “recipes” or “knitting patterns” and I think that says interesting things about knitr.

Lauren Ackerman (@VerbingNouns; 2/0): @trochee @joshraclaw i have good news for you https://t.co/iHLw63OqZc

Matthew Mathias (@matthewDmathias; 0/0): @iwasleeg Sort of reminds me of https://t.co/lhsNlzYsL9

Cristina (@biologeek; 0/0): @hadleywickham Any hack to use {roxygen2} for homeless scripts like Doxygen does for C*? Can’t seem to find anything for scripts outside of packages. knitr::spin() has been brought up but it doesn’t work quite the same.

xaringan

Danielle Navarro (@djnavarro; 53/3): I don’t know what I’m more pleased with - the fact that I finally forced myself to start working on this horrible horrible tutorial, or that I managed to learn the basics of @statsgen’s magnificent kunoichi theme for xaringan! 😍 https://t.co/qGJl6T2f7O

Peter Hickey (@PeteHaitch; 11/6): @LinYingxin is presenting scMerge, her second talk this week after her great presentation at #abacbs2018! She’s switched from powerpoint to #xaringan for more #rstats street cred at #BioCAsia 😎

Danielle Navarro (@djnavarro; 2/0): @MarKubsch @bmwiernik I hate it so much I’m thinking of teaching myself xaringan as an avoidance mechanism

Emi Tanaka 🌾 (@statsgen; 1/0): @djnavarro @EmmanuelPothos It might help if you use xaringan::inf_mr() which gives sort of a live preview if you are not using it already. I always use it when developing my slides