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rmarkdown | fpdf2 | |
---|---|---|
38 | 23 | |
2,802 | 936 | |
1.1% | 5.1% | |
7.6 | 9.3 | |
16 days ago | 1 day ago | |
R | Python | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
rmarkdown
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Pandoc
I'm surprised to see no one has pointed out [RMarkdown + RStudio](https://rmarkdown.rstudio.com) as one way to immediately interface with Pandoc.
I used to write papers and slides in LaTeX (using vim, because who needs render previews), then eventually switched to Pandoc (also vim). I eventually discovered RMarkdown+RStudio. I was looking for a nice way to format a simple table and discovered that rmarkdown had nice extensions of basic markdown (this was many years ago so maybe that is incorporated into vanilla markdown/pandoc).
The RMarkdown page claims:
> R Markdown supports dozens of static and dynamic output formats including HTML, PDF, MS Word, Beamer, HTML5 slides, Tufte-style handouts, books, dashboards, shiny applications, scientific articles, websites, and more.
...which I think is largely due to using pandoc as the core generator.
RStudio shows you the pandoc command it runs to generate your document, which I've used to figure out the pandoc command I want to run when I've switched to using pandoc directly.
This is a bit of a "lazy" way to interact with pandoc. Maybe the "laziest" aspect: when I get a new computer, I can install the entire stack by installing Rstudio, then opening a new rmarkdown document. Rstudio asks whether I'd like to install all the necessary libraries -- click "yes" and that's it. Maybe that sounds silly but it used to be a lot of work to manage your LaTeX install. These days I greatly favor things that save me time, which seems to get more precious every year.
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2023 Lookback
Then, I worked on a Shiny project where I had to learn R Markdown. I was very excited about it because being paid to learn a new technology is something I have always preferred. I also worked with Highcharts graphs, which I didn’t do for years. It was also the first time I was being paid to design something. I didn’t enjoy that part as much as development, but I cannot say it was a bother either.
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Why won't my boxplot knit?
files/figure-latex/unnamed-chunk-2-1.pdf) Try to find the following text in midterm-question.Rmd: ![](midterm-question_ You may need to add $ $ around a certain inline R expression `r ` in midterm-question.Rmd (see the above hint). See https://github.com/rstudio/rmarkdown/issues/385 for more info.
- new learner to R .. need help
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We’re Washington Post reporters who analyzed Google’s C4 data set to see which websites AI uses to make itself sound smarter. Ask us Anything!
We used R Markdown for cleaning and analysis, creating updateable web pages we could share with everyone involved. Similarweb’s categories were useful, but too niche for us. So we spent a lot of time recategorizing and redefining the groupings. We used the token count for each website — how many words or phrases — to measure it’s importance in the overall training data.
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Possible to include inline code in a math equation in Org mode?
In [R Markdown](https://rmarkdown.rstudio.com/) or [Quarto](https://quarto.org/), I can include inline code in a math equation, e.g.,
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I have to somehow convert this chart into an html file into a file that opens like a website any ideas?
you probably want an rmd file with html output
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Seeking some markdown help - please redirect me elsewhere if this doesn't belong here
GitHub issue code folding
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Generating PDF 📄 with Python 🐍
R Markdown / Quarto https://quarto.org/ https://rmarkdown.rstudio.com/ ; can dynamically generate a document and compile it to HTML, PDF, others
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PYTHON CHARTS: the Python data visualization site with more than 500 different charts with reproducible code and color tools
Hi! At this moment I'm not opening the source code, but I can explain you the tech used. This site is based on another site I created before named https://r-charts.com/ and it was created with blogdown (HUGO + R Markdown). Hence, each tutorials is an R markdown file. For PYTHON CHARTS, in order to run Python within an R markdown file I had to use an R package named reticulate. In addition, the template depends on shuffle.js for filtering and fuse.js for searching
fpdf2
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Pylint strict base configuration
I recently used this approach on fpdf2: PR #780 Hardening Pylint config
- New fpdf2 release - 2.7.4 - Images can now be embedded as CMYK - Docs for using Pygal & FastAPI - Various bugfixes
- Pdfkit vs weasyprint ?
- New fpdf2 release - 2.7.0 - New methods table() and set_fallback_fonts() - keep_aspect_ratio - ICC Profiles
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Generating PDF files via FastAPI and sending the file to the user's email. (Currently using PyPDF2)
If you want to contribute to fpdf2, I would welcome a Pull Request to add an example of using it with FastAPI, in this documentation Markdown page: https://github.com/PyFPDF/fpdf2/blob/master/docs/UsageInWebAPI.md 😉
- New fpdf2 release - 2.6.1 - PDF encryption - skewing - markdown hyperlinks - Python 3.11
- New fpdf2 release - 2.6.0 - HTMLMixin not needed anymore - more HTML tags supported - demonstration Jupyter notebook
- looking for an "low dependency" or pythonesque way to generate PDF's
- New fpdf2 release - v2.5.7 - Support for subscript & superscript - set_page_background - embed_file - set_char_spacing
- New fpdf2 release - v2.5.6 - PDF document signing - greek tutorial - better SVG image parsing
What are some alternatives?
Pluto.jl - 🎈 Simple reactive notebooks for Julia
pikepdf - A Python library for reading and writing PDF, powered by QPDF
jupytext - Jupyter Notebooks as Markdown Documents, Julia, Python or R scripts
borb - borb is a library for reading, creating and manipulating PDF files in python.
here_here - I love the here package. Here's why.
rst2pdf - Use a text editor. Make a PDF.
tinytex - A lightweight, cross-platform, portable, and easy-to-maintain LaTeX distribution based on TeX Live
undying-dusk - The very first PDF video game
TikZ - Complete collection of my PGF/TikZ figures.
oso - Oso is a batteries-included framework for building authorization in your application.
blogdown - Create Blogs and Websites with R Markdown
yellowbrick - Visual analysis and diagnostic tools to facilitate machine learning model selection.