Here is an equation.
\begin{equation} f\left(k\right) = \binom{n}{k} p^k\left(1-p\right)^{n-k} (#eq:binom) \end{equation}
You may refer to using \@ref(eq:binom)
, like see Equation \@ref(eq:binom).
Labeled theorems can be referenced in text using \@ref(thm:tri)
, for example, check out this smart theorem \@ref(thm:tri).
::: {.theorem #tri} For a right triangle, if $c$ denotes the length of the hypotenuse and $a$ and $b$ denote the lengths of the other two sides, we have $$a^2 + b^2 = c^2$$ :::
Read more here https://bookdown.org/yihui/bookdown/markdown-extensions-by-bookdown.html.
The bs4_book
theme also includes special callout blocks, like this .rmdnote
.
::: {.rmdnote} You can use markdown inside a block.
head(beaver1, n = 5)
#> day time temp activ
#> 1 346 840 36.33 0
#> 2 346 850 36.34 0
#> 3 346 900 36.35 0
#> 4 346 910 36.42 0
#> 5 346 920 36.55 0
:::
It is up to the user to define the appearance of these blocks for LaTeX output.
You may also use: .rmdcaution
, .rmdimportant
, .rmdtip
, or .rmdwarning
as the block name.
The R Markdown Cookbook provides more help on how to use custom blocks to design your own callouts: https://bookdown.org/yihui/rmarkdown-cookbook/custom-blocks.html
Add the following code to your website.
For more information on customizing the embed code, read Embedding Snippets.