render_asciidoc()render_html()
render_latex()
render_sweave()
render_listings()
render_markdown(strict = FALSE)
render_jekyll(highlight = c("pygments", "prettify", "none"), extra = "")
render_rst(strict = FALSE)
render_textile()
TRUE
, code blocks will be indented by 4 spaces, otherwise they are
put in fences made by three backticks; for reST, if TRUE
, code is
put under two colons and indentepygments
,
the Liquid syntax is used (default approach Jekyll); for prettify
,
the output is prepared for the JavaScript library none
, no highligpygments
, it
can be 'linenos'
; for prettify
, it can be 'linenums'
NULL
; corresponding hooks are set as a side effectrender_markdown(strict = TRUE)
), extended markdown (e.g. GitHub
Flavored Markdown and pandoc; render_markdown(strict = FALSE)
), and
Jekyll (a blogging system on GitHub; render_jekyll()
). For LaTeX
output, there are three variants as well: render_latex()
; use the LaTeX render_sweave()
; use render_listings()
; use LaTeX render_html()
; render_rst()
and
render_asciidoc()
are for reStructuredText and AsciiDoc respectively.These functions can be used before knit()
or in the first chunk of the
input document (ideally this chunk has options include = FALSE
and
cache = FALSE
) so that all the following chunks will be formatted as
expected.
You can use knit_hooks
to further customize output hooks; see
references.
Jekyll and Liquid: