![]() ![]() Say for example, “.8//linewidth” or “8cm” for LaTeX, or “300px” for HTML.įor demonstration purposes, let’s take a plot from earlier and show how it’s output can change. You can also include LaTeX output or HTML output. This can be handy if you like the current aspect ratio of your plot, but you want to shrink it by say 50% - which you would do with “50%”. out.height & out.width: The height and width of your plot in the final file.fig.height & fig.width: How tall and wide would you like your figure in inches? Each takes one number (e.g., 7, or 9).fig.cap: Would you like a caption for your figure? It takes a character vector as input: “My Amazing Graph”.fig.align: How do you want your figure aligned? Takes one of the following inputs: “default”, “center”, “left”, or “right”? ( demo).There are many chunk options that control your output, but only a few that you really need to worry about for your figures: 21.1 How can I include a screenshot of an interactive graphic in PDF or Word?ġ0.4 Which chunk options should you care about for this?.20.2 How do I set options specific to each output.15.14 My Figure or Table isn’t being cited.15.13 I want to include inline R code verbatim to show an example.15.11 “The Legend of Link I”: Your images in !() don’t work.15.10 “Spolling II” Incorrectly spelled chunk option inputs.15.9 “Spolling I” Incorrectly spelled chunk options.15.8 “The Path Not Taken” File path incorrect.15.6 “Forgotten Trails II”: Chunk option with trailing ", or not input.15.5 “Forgotten Trails I”: Missing “,”, or “(”, “}”, or “’” 2.4 Figures bookdown: Authoring Books and Technical Documents with R Markdown 2.4 Figures By default, figures have no captions in the output generated by knitr, which means they will be placed wherever they were generated in the R code.15.4 “Not what I ordered”: Objects not created in the right order.15.3 “Duplication”: Duplicated chunk names.15 Common Problems with rmarkdown (and some solutions).14 Captioning and referencing equations. ![]() 13.6 How to move the bibliography location.13.5 How to change the bibliography style.13 Citing Articles & Bibliography Styles.12.4 How to refer to tables and figures in text?.10.4 Which chunk options should you care about for this?.7.4.1 A note on workflow with rmarkdown: HTML first, PDF/word later.7.4 How do I convert to HTML, PDF, or Word?.6.8 Nick’s rmarkdown hygiene recommendations.6.4 The anatomy of an rmarkdown document.5.12.1 Aside: Creating an RStudio project.5.9 Your Turn: Use your own rstudio project.5.5 When you start a new project: Open a new RStudio project.4.4 What is RStudio, and why should I use it?.2.9 R Markdown helps complete the solution to the reproducibility problem.2.7 Markdown as a new player to legibility.2.6 Literate programming is a partial solution.
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