
Prepare reprexes for posting to GitHub
issues,
StackOverflow, in Slack messages or snippets, or even to paste into PowerPoint or Keynote slides.
What is a reprex
? It’s a reproducible example, as coined by
Romain Francois in a tweet from 2014.
Given R code on the clipboard, selected in RStudio, as an expression (quoted or not), or in a file …
rmarkdown::render()
,render()
arguments, knitr options, and
Pandoc options.Get resulting runnable code + output as
The result is returned invisibly, written to a file and, if possible, placed on the clipboard. Preview an HTML version in RStudio viewer or default browser.
Install from CRAN:
install.packages("reprex")
or get a development version from GitHub:
# install.packages("pak")
pak::pak("tidyverse/reprex")
On Linux, you probably want to install
xclip or
xsel, so reprex can
access the X11 clipboard. This is 'nice to have', but not mandatory. The
usual sudo apt-get install
or sudo yum install
installation methods
should work for both xclip and xsel.
Let’s say you copy this code onto your clipboard (or, on RStudio Server or Cloud, select it):
(y <- 1:4)
mean(y)
Then call reprex()
, where the default target venue is GitHub:
reprex()
A nicely rendered HTML preview will display in RStudio's Viewer (if you’re in RStudio) or your default browser otherwise.
The relevant bit of GitHub-flavored Markdown is ready to be pasted from your clipboard (on RStudio Server or Cloud, you will need to copy this yourself):
``` r
(y <- 1:4)
#> [1] 1 2 3 4
mean(y)
#> [1] 2.5
```
Here’s what that Markdown would look like rendered in a GitHub issue:
(y <- 1:4)
#> [1] 1 2 3 4
mean(y)
#> [1] 2.5
Anyone else can copy, paste, and run this immediately.
In addition to GitHub, this Markdown also works on Stack Overflow and Discourse. Those venues can be formally requested via venue = "so"
and venue = "ds"
, but they are just aliases for venue = "gh"
.
Instead of reading from the clipboard, you can:
reprex(mean(rnorm(10)))
to get code from expression.
reprex(input = "mean(rnorm(10))\n")
gets code from character
vector (detected via length or terminating newline). Leading prompts
are stripped from input source: reprex(input = "> median(1:3)\n")
produces same output as reprex(input = "median(1:3)\n")
reprex(input = "my_reprex.R")
gets code from file
Use one of the RStudio add-ins to use the selected text or current file.
But wait, there’s more!
Get slightly different Markdown, optimized for Slack messages, with
reprex(..., venue = "slack")
.
Get a runnable R script, augmented with commented output, with
reprex(..., venue = "R")
. This is useful for Slack code snippets, email,
etc.
Get html with reprex(..., venue = "html")
. Useful for sites that don't
support Markdown.
Prepare (un)rendered, syntax-highlighted code snippets to paste into
Keynote or PowerPoint, with reprex(..., venue = "rtf")
. This
feature is still experimental; see the associated article for more.
By default, figures are uploaded to imgur.com and the resulting URL is dropped into an inline image tag.
If you really need to reprex in a specific directory, use the wd
argument. For example, reprex(wd = ".")
requests the current
working directory.
Append session info via reprex(..., session_info = TRUE)
.
Get clean, runnable code from wild-caught reprexes with
reprex_invert()
= the opposite of reprex()
reprex_clean()
, e.g. when you copy/paste from GitHub or Stack
Overflowreprex_rescue()
, when you’re dealing with copy/paste from R
Consoleinstall.packages('reprex')