blogdown
Rebecca Senior (@RebeccaASenior; 14/3): Fortunate enough to have put off making a website for so long that #blogdown appeared as an #rstats📦in the meantime. If you’re interested in #microclimates, #thermal images, #tropical #forests or #climatechange, please check it out: https://t.co/2EHIOFYRGS 🌳☀️🌡️ ↪
R-bloggers (@Rbloggers; 0/1): (Yet Another) Migration to Blogdown Post https://t.co/KZYtBm3o6X #rstats #DataScience ↪
bookdown
Yihui Xie (@xieyihui; 7/0): @_ColinFay So you have already started preparing for the 2019 bookdown contest?! 😂 ↪
Kendal Smith (@kendalsmith99; 2/0): @DoctorErinCat @JASPStats @TunnelOfFire @realScottPeters For JASP specifically, @aggieerin ’s stuff is great: https://t.co/6SvE5GdbAR
Others:
https://t.co/EUOeA8mMrE
https://t.co/zlo5gfyUQM
https://t.co/nw7uhS7Gmu ↪
Anne Seubert (@KeksTester; 2/0): #buchchallenge 7/7
7 Tage, 7 Bücher, ohne Kommentar. Mich hatte
@michaelwedell gefragt und für den final bookdown frage ich @wort https://t.co/USTF880WEY ↪
Ben Marwick (@benmarwick; 1/1): @martinjhnhadley Most journals and co-authors I work with need MS Word docx, so I use bookdown::word_document2() https://t.co/3YGIooHDwy often with a template to give line numbers & a few other things: https://t.co/Y04akKYgoh ↪
Jean (@JeanManguy; 1/0): @martinjhnhadley I chose bookdown (long academic article), I haven’t tested radix yet, I think it was because of I had problems with rmarkdown that I didn’t have with bookdown regarding references / biblatex and utf8 ↪
Martin John Hadley (@martinjhnhadley; 0/0): @JeanManguy If I could go back in time and tell myself about bookdown before RMarkdown I would. ↪
Martin John Hadley (@martinjhnhadley; 0/0): What output type would you choose for a #rstats RMarkdown document when writing a 2-10ish page academic article?
title: “Which output type for journal articles?”
output: CHOOSE_A_POLL_OPTION
Radix 📦 https://t.co/t6cIZaBW9y
Bookdown 📦 https://t.co/6iy3qk4tjt ↪
knitr
Bradley Boehmke (@bradleyboehmke; 4/0): #rstats tip: if you build a lot of teaching/training slides with .Rmd templates, easily extract the code chunks to a .R file with knitr::purl(“file_name.Rmd”) so that students can follow along. This will also teach you the importance of properly naming your code chunks!! ↪
Hao Ye (@Hao_and_Y; 2/0): @RLadiesGNV @DinaKla @fmbrewing Like, actual knitting, with yarn? Or is knitr ok, too? ↪
xaringan
Bradley Boehmke (@bradleyboehmke; 18/3): Slides for a #MachineLearning workshop I gave this week discussing decision trees, bagging, and random forests. Provides an example implementation with the #rstats ranger package. Slides developed with xaringan and animations done with gganimate.
https://t.co/kj14rh0fvG ↪
Vilma Romero (@vilsurr; 0/0): @pachamaltese @RLadiesLima Gracias! 😊 con este taller he aprendido a usar el tema Kunoichi para #xaringan 😀 ↪