rmarkdown
gotenberg
Our great sponsors
rmarkdown | gotenberg | |
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38 | 53 | |
2,782 | 6,477 | |
0.9% | 3.9% | |
7.6 | 8.9 | |
23 days ago | 7 days ago | |
R | Go | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | MIT License |
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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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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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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
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looking for an "low dependency" or pythonesque way to generate PDF's
What you want is not Python, its R Markdown; https://rmarkdown.rstudio.com/
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LaTex alternative/replacement written in Rust?
not sure what you mean by this exactly but in my experience its far better to use Markdown + pandoc for stuff like this. Actually I use R Markdown which can compile to either HTML or PDF from the same source document, with executable code chunks embedded (to generate the document contents) ; https://rmarkdown.rstudio.com/
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Neovim support for editing Quarto (.qmd) files
Quarto is a relatively new Markdown-based file format. One of its main uses is writing reports that interleave text with code and results; it supports rendering with knitr (an engine widely used in the R community) as well as Jupyter (more popular with Python users). Since I work in data science, I use both languages regularly. For writing R reports, I've switched from R Markdown (Quarto's R-focused predecessor) to Quarto. I'd also like to start writing Python reports in Quarto using Neovim.
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How do you build and send reports to your users?
If you're not already aware of and using RMarkdown, make learning it a priority. I use both R and Python extensively. Although Jupyter Notebooks have utility, RMarkdown is the superior tool for the most flexibility in reporting.
- Ask HN: Markdown/reStructuredText to write a PhD thesis in STEM fields?
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Securing R Markdown Documents
The polished package now supports Rmarkdown documents that use the shiny runtime. This includes flexdashboard!
gotenberg
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Create PDFs with Tailwind
Use a server-side headless browser such as puppeteer to convert the HTML to PDF. This is the most reliable free option, but requires a server. If you need to use it in production, we recommend you use Gotenberg.
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Launch HN: Onedoc (YC W24) – A better way to create PDFs
We're using Gotenberg[1] to convert a rendered web page (with Elixir/Phoenix, in our case) to PDF. Works like a charm and we can use our existing frontend code/styling (including SVG graph generators) which is a huge bonus.
- Htmldocs: Typeset and Generate PDFs with HTML/CSS
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How to Simply Generate a PDF From HTML in Symfony With WeasyPrint
If you also want to convert Markdown or LibreOffice formats, the self-hosted API Gotenberg is worth checking out
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PDF rendering server-side using HTML 5 + CSS 3
I found a project that does exactly that (https://github.com/gotenberg/gotenberg). It’s my best bet for now, but I still need to test GraalVM integration with JS runtimes (and test JS libraries) and the Kotlin compiler targeting Node.
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PDF generation with Gotenberg
Gotenberg is a Docker-based stateless API for PDF generation from HTML and Markdown files.
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(Free) Open-source PDF Generation/Export
Otherwise, any pdf to hml chromium based solution hosted via docker, like gotenberg](https://github.com/gotenberg/gotenberg) or browserless.io(which is free if you create open source). Generating pdfs from html directly in .NET was always a pain. Wkhtml (and wrappers that use it) uses WebKit and comes with a load of issues of its own, similar to running and styling anything in Safari. Using chromium based engine saves a lot of time as it's the most popular way of doing it these days. You can also use puppeteer-sharp with local chromium if you host your app on something that allows it(f.e. not Azure Functions).
Think you mean https://gotenberg.dev ?
- Software welche PDF durchsuchbar macht?
- How to create a PDF?
What are some alternatives?
DinkToPdf - C# .NET Core wrapper for wkhtmltopdf library that uses Webkit engine to convert HTML pages to PDF.
koodo-reader - A modern ebook manager and reader with sync and backup capacities for Windows, macOS, Linux and Web
PDFKit - A JavaScript PDF generation library for Node and the browser
go-wkhtmltopdf - Go bindings for wkhtmltopdf and high-level HTML to PDF conversion interface
docxtemplater - Generate docx, pptx, and xlsx from templates (Word, Powerpoint and Excel documents), from Node.js or the browser. Demo: https://www.docxtemplater.com/demo. #docx #office #generator #templating #report #json #generate #generation #template #create #pptx #docx #xlsx #react #vuejs #angularjs #browser #typescript #image #html #table #chart
libreoffice-headless - LibreOffice Docker image for OpenERP v6.1 with Aeroo Reports
Pluto.jl - 🎈 Simple reactive notebooks for Julia
PuppeteerSharp - Headless Chrome .NET API
pandoc - Universal markup converter
jupytext - Jupyter Notebooks as Markdown Documents, Julia, Python or R scripts
PhpSpreadsheet - A pure PHP library for reading and writing spreadsheet files
Laradock - Full PHP development environment for Docker.