| quick-output {huxtable} | R Documentation |
Quickly print objects to a PDF, TeX, HTML, Microsoft Office or RTF document
Description
These functions use huxtable to print objects to an output document. They are useful as one-liners for data reporting.
Usage
quick_latex(
...,
file = confirm("huxtable-output.tex"),
borders = 0.4,
open = interactive()
)
quick_pdf(
...,
file = confirm("huxtable-output.pdf"),
borders = 0.4,
open = interactive(),
width = NULL,
height = NULL
)
quick_html(
...,
file = confirm("huxtable-output.html"),
borders = 0.4,
open = interactive()
)
quick_docx(
...,
file = confirm("huxtable-output.docx"),
borders = 0.4,
open = interactive()
)
quick_pptx(
...,
file = confirm("huxtable-output.pptx"),
borders = 0.4,
open = interactive()
)
quick_xlsx(
...,
file = confirm("huxtable-output.xlsx"),
borders = 0.4,
open = interactive()
)
quick_rtf(
...,
file = confirm("huxtable-output.rtf"),
borders = 0.4,
open = interactive()
)
Arguments
... |
One or more huxtables or R objects with an |
file |
File path for the output. |
borders |
Border width for members of |
open |
Logical. Automatically open the resulting file? |
width |
String passed to the LaTeX |
height |
String passed to |
Details
Objects in ... will be converted to huxtables, with borders added.
If ‘file’ is not specified, the command will fail in non-interactive sessions. In interactive sessions, the default file path is "huxtable-output.xxx" in the working directory; if this already exists, you will be asked to confirm manually before proceeding.
To create docx and pptx files flextable and officer must be installed, while xlsx
needs openxlsx.
Value
Invisible NULL.
Examples
## Not run:
m <- matrix(1:4, 2, 2)
quick_pdf(m, jams)
quick_latex(m, jams)
quick_html(m, jams)
quick_docx(m, jams)
quick_xlsx(m, jams)
quick_pptx(m, jams)
quick_rtf(m, jams)
## End(Not run)