word_document {rmarkdown} | R Documentation |
Convert to an MS Word document
Description
Format for converting from R Markdown to an MS Word document.
Usage
word_document(
toc = FALSE,
toc_depth = 3,
number_sections = FALSE,
fig_width = 5,
fig_height = 4,
fig_caption = TRUE,
df_print = "default",
highlight = "default",
reference_docx = "default",
keep_md = FALSE,
md_extensions = NULL,
pandoc_args = NULL
)
Arguments
toc |
|
toc_depth |
Depth of headers to include in table of contents |
number_sections |
|
fig_width |
Default width (in inches) for figures |
fig_height |
Default height (in inches) for figures |
fig_caption |
|
df_print |
Method to be used for printing data frames. Valid values
include "default", "kable", "tibble", and "paged". The "default" method
uses a corresponding S3 method of |
highlight |
Syntax highlighting style passed to Pandoc. Supported built-in styles include "default", "tango", "pygments", "kate", "monochrome", "espresso", "zenburn", "haddock", and "breezedark". Two custom styles are also included, "arrow", an accessible color scheme, and "rstudio", which mimics the default IDE theme. Alternatively, supply a path to a ‘.theme’ file to use a custom Pandoc style. Note that custom theme requires Pandoc 2.0+. Pass |
reference_docx |
Use the specified file as a style reference in producing a docx file. For best results, the reference docx should be a modified version of a docx file produced using pandoc. Pass "default" to use the rmarkdown default styles. |
keep_md |
Keep the markdown file generated by knitting. |
md_extensions |
Markdown extensions to be added or removed from the
default definition of R Markdown. See the |
pandoc_args |
Additional command line options to pass to pandoc |
Details
See the online
documentation for additional details on using the word_document
format.
R Markdown documents can have optional metadata that is used to generate a document header that includes the title, author, and date. For more details see the documentation on R Markdown metadata.
R Markdown documents also support citations. You can find more information on the markdown syntax for citations in the Bibliographies and Citations article in the online documentation.
Value
R Markdown output format to pass to render
Examples
## Not run:
library(rmarkdown)
# simple invocation
render("input.Rmd", word_document())
# specify an option for syntax highlighting
render("input.Rmd", word_document(highlight = "zenburn"))
## End(Not run)