Outputs an R object in HTML format.
hwrite(x, page=NULL, ...)
A character vector containing the output HTML code.
The following optional arguments can always be used:
a logical specifying if a breakline (carriage return) should
be appended at the end of x
. Default is FALSE
.
a logical controlling if the object x
should be written as an HTML table. Default is TRUE
for matrices and vectors containing more than one element, and FALSE
otherwise. If set to FALSE
, the object is written as a vector (or a matrix) of HTML text elements.
a character vector containing the URLs the HTML element
will point to. This argument is the equivalent of the attribute href
of the HTML tag <a>.
a character string naming the HTML element for further reference. This is the equivalent of the attribute name
of the HTML tag <a>.
a logical. If TRUE
, places the HTML element into a HTML section, using the <div> HTML tag. This is helpful for styling a section. Default is FALSE
.
a logical indicating if x
should be centered. Default is FALSE
. This element may interfere with the current CSS style. Please consider the use the CSS style attribute "text-align" instead.
Additional arguments are added to the HTML element as HTML attributes. For HTML tables, attributes are distributed on table cells using R recycling rules. For text elements, a <span> HTML tag (or <div> if div
is TRUE
) is used to accommodate the attributes.
If x
is rendered as an HTML text element, the following optional arguments can be used:
a numeric containing the heading level style. Valid values spans from 1 to 5. See Examples.
If x
is a vector with more than one element, the following optional
arguments can be used:
a couple of optional numeric values indicating the desired number of rows and columns in the table. This is useful to orient a vector.
logical. If TRUE
, the table is filled by
rows first, otherwise the table is filled by columns first. Default is FALSE
.
a logical indicating if the names of the elements should
be written if the vector is named. Default is TRUE
.
If x
is rendered as an HTML table element, the following optional arguments can be used:
a numeric. Specifies the table border width. A value of 0 implies that no borders will be drawn. This argument may interfere with the "border" CSS style attribute.
a logical value indicating whether the row (resp. column) names of
x
are to be written. Default is TRUE
.
a numeric. Defines the spacing and padding space in pixels between cells. These arguments may interfere with the "border" and "padding" CSS style attributes.
a character string. Specifies the global table width in HTML units (pixels or %).
a named character vector. Specifies the columns width
in HTML units (pixels or %) where names of col.width
are used to
point column names of x
. NAs may be used to let several column
widths unspecified.
a list of character vectors or a character vector. Distributes the attribute '*' on the HTML table cells, according to rows (resp. columns). Named lists (or vectors) point the corresponding rows/columns, according to their names. Unnamed lists (or vectors) point the rows/columns in the numeric order and NAs can be used to omit rows/columns. If pointed rows/columns sizes don't match, vector values are recycled using R rules.
a character string. Uses the global table attribute '*' to render the HTML table. The attribute is added to the main <table> tag. Some uses include setting of the "border" and "margin" CSS attributes that cannot be distributed on cells.
a character string, vector or matrix. Distributes the attribute '*' on the HTML table cells, using R recycling rules. Any valid HTML attributes can be used. The value may contain NAs to omit cells. Matrices may contain one extra row and/or column to target heading cells.
See Examples for many illustrated examples of all arguments.
If x
is a vector of only one element, it will be written by default
as an HTML text element unless table
is TRUE
: in that case,
it will be written as an HTML table containing an unique element.
If x
is a vector of more than one element, a matrix or a data.frame, it will be
written by default as an HTML table unless table
is FALSE
: in that case,
it will be written as a vector or a matrix of HTML text elements.
Many optional arguments can be used to render an HTML object. See below for
additional information. Many comprehensive examples can be found in the
Examples section by typing example(hwrite)
.
# NOT RUN {
hwriter:::showExample()
# }
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