knitr::opts_chunk$set(echo = FALSE, warning = FALSE, tidy = FALSE, message = FALSE, fig.align = 'center', out.width = "100%") options(knitr.table.format = "html")
This is the posterdown_betterport
template for the {posterdown} package! I was inspired by the twitter thread of Mike Morrison and wanted to apply the #betterposter
concept to the reproducible (yet simple to use) functionality of the {posterdown} package [@R-posterdown]. If you're not an R user don't sweat as you do NOT need to use it at all! Feel free to use only the Markdown functionality of this package :)
knitr::write_bib(c('posterdown', 'rmarkdown','pagedown'), 'packages.bib')
I will show here how to include poster elements that may be useful, such as an equation using mathjax:
$$ E = mc^2 $$
To reference a citation you can add your .bib
file to the working directory and name it in the YAML metadata or generate an automated one as done here, then you only need to reference the label value in the .bib
file. For example this package is built on top of the wonderful {pagedown} package and I will cite it at the end of this sentance using this in the rmd [@R-pagedown]
[@R-pagedown].
To get a better understanding of how to include features like these please refer to the {posterdown} wiki.
Now on to the results!
Here you may have some figures to show off, bellow I have made a scatterplot with the infamous Iris dataset and I can even reference to the figure automatically like this, Figure \@ref(fig:irisfigure)
, Figure \@ref(fig:irisfigure).
par(mar=c(2,2,0,1)) plot(x = iris$Sepal.Length, y = iris$Sepal.Width, col = iris$Species, pch = 19, xlab = "Sepal Length", ylab = "Sepal Width")
Maybe you want to show off some of that fancy code you spent so much time on to make that figure, well you can do that too! Just use the echo=TRUE
option in the r code chunk options, Figure \@ref(fig:myprettycode)!
#trim whitespace par(mar=c(2,2,0,0)) #plot boxplots boxplot(iris$Sepal.Width~iris$Species, col = "#008080", border = "#0b4545", ylab = "Sepal Width (cm)", xlab = "Species")
How about a neat table of data? See, Table \@ref(tab:iristable):
knitr::kable( iris[1:15,1:5], format = "html", caption = "A table made with the **knitr::kable** function.", align = "c", col.names = c("Sepal <br> Length", "Sepal <br> Width", "Petal <br> Length", "Petal <br> Width", "Species"), escape = FALSE)
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