Quickly print objects to a PDF, TeX, HTML, Microsoft Office or RTF document
These functions use huxtable to print objects to an output document. They are useful as one-liners for data reporting.
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()
)... |
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 |
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.
Invisible NULL.
## 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)
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