Description Usage Arguments Value References Examples
Creates a Pandoc's markdown format list from provided character vector/list.
1 2 3 | pandoc.list.return(elements, style = c("bullet", "ordered", "roman"),
loose = FALSE, add.line.breaks = TRUE, add.end.of.list = TRUE,
indent.level = 0, missing = panderOptions("missing"))
|
elements |
character vector of strings |
style |
the required style of the list |
loose |
adding a newline between elements |
add.line.breaks |
adding a leading and trailing newline before/after the list |
add.end.of.list |
adding a separator comment after the list |
indent.level |
the level of indent |
missing |
string to replace missing values |
By default this function outputs (see: cat
) the result. If you would want to catch the result instead, then call the function ending in .return
.
John MacFarlane (2012): _Pandoc User's Guide_. http://johnmacfarlane.net/pandoc/README.html
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 | ## basic lists
pandoc.list(letters[1:5])
pandoc.list(letters[1:5])
pandoc.list(letters[1:5], 'ordered')
pandoc.list(letters[1:5], 'roman')
pandoc.list(letters[1:5], loose = TRUE)
## nested lists
l <- list("First list element",
rep.int('sub element', 5),
"Second element",
list('F', 'B', 'I', c('phone', 'pad', 'talics')))
pandoc.list(l)
pandoc.list(l, loose = TRUE)
pandoc.list(l, 'roman')
## complex nested lists
pandoc.list(list('one', as.list(2)))
pandoc.list(list('one', list('two')))
pandoc.list(list('one', list(2:3)))
|
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