Render all of the R Markdown documents within a directory as a website.
render_site(input = ".", output_format = "all", envir = parent.frame(),
quiet = FALSE, encoding = getOption("encoding"))clean_site(input = ".", preview = FALSE, quiet = FALSE,
encoding = getOption("encoding"))
site_config(input = ".", encoding = getOption("encoding"))
site_generator(input = ".", output_format = NULL,
encoding = getOption("encoding"))
default_site_generator(input, encoding = getOption("encoding"), ...)
Website directory (or the name of a file within the directory)
R Markdown format to convert to (defaults to "all").
The environment in which the code chunks are to be evaluated
during knitting (can use new.env
to guarantee an empty new
environment).
Whether to list the files to be removed rather than actually removing them.
TRUE
to suppress messages and other output.
The encoding of the input file; see file
.
Currently unused
render_site
returns the name of the site output file (relative to the input directory).
clean_site
returns the names of the generated files removed during cleaning.
site_config
returns the contents of _site.yml as an R list
default_site_generator
returns the default site generator for R Markdown websites
A "_site.yml" file can be used to configure the behavior of site generation. Here is an example configuration file:
name: my-website output_dir: _site include: ["demo.R"] exclude: ["docs.txt", "*.csv"] navbar: title: "My Website" left: - text: "Home" href: index.html - text: "About" href: about.html output: html_document: toc: true highlight: textmate
The name
field provides a suggested URL path for your website when it is published (by default this is just the name of the directory containing the site). The output_dir
indicates which directory to copy site content into ("_site" is the default if none is specified). Note that this can be "." to keep all content within the root website directory alongside the source code.
The include
and exclude
fields enable you to override the default behavior vis-a-vis what files are copied into the "_site" directory (wildcards can be used as in the above example).
The navbar
field can be used to define a navigation bar for websites based on the html_document
format.
Finally, the output
field enables you to specify output options that are common to all documents within the website (you can also still provide local options within each document that override any common options).
The behavior of the default site generation function (rmarkdown::default_site
) is described above. It is also possible to define a custom site generator that has alternate behavior. A site generator is an R function that is bound to by including it in the "site:" field of the "index.Rmd" or "index.md" file. For example:
title: "My Book" output: bookdown::gitbook site: bookdown::bookdown_site
A site generation function should return a list with the following elements:
name
The name for the website (e.g. the parent directory name).
output_dir
The directory where the website output is written to.
This path should be relative to the site directory (e.g. "." or "_site")
render
An R function that can be called to generate the site.
The function should accept the input_file
, output_format
,
envir
, quiet
, and encoding
arguments.
clean
An R function that returns relative paths to the files
generated by render_site
(these files are the ones which will be removed
by the clean_site
function.
Note that the input_file
argument will be NULL
when the entire site is being generated. It will be set to a specific file name if a front-end tool is attempting to preview it (e.g. RStudio IDE via the Knit button).
When quiet = FALSE
the render
function should also print a line of output using the message
function indicating which output file should be previewed, for example:
if (!quiet) message("\nOutput created: ", output)
Emitting this line enables front-ends like RStudio to determine which file they should open to preview the website.
See the source code of the rmarkdown::default_site
function for a
example of a site generation function.
The render_site
function enables you to render a collection of markdown documents within a directory as a website. There are two requirements for a directory to be rendered as a website:
It must contain either an "index.Rmd" or "index.md" file.
It must contain a site configuration file ("_site.yml").
The most minimal valid website is an empty "index.Rmd" and an empty "_site.yml". With this configuration a single empty webpage would be generated via a call to render_site
. If you add additional markdown documents to the directory they will also be rendered. By default a site is rendered in the following fashion:
R Markdown (.Rmd) and plain markdown (.md) files in the root directory are rendered. Note however that markdown files beginning with "_" are not rendered (this is a convention to designate files that are included by top level documents).
All output and supporting files are copied to a "_site" subdirectory of the website directory (this is configurable, see discussion below).
The following files are not copied to the "_site" sub-directory:
Files beginning with "." (hidden files).
Files beginning with "_"
Files known to contain R source code (e.g. ".R", ".s", ".Rmd"), R data (e.g. ".RData", ".rds"), or configuration data (e.g. ".Rproj", "rsconnect")).
Note that you can override which files are included or excluded via settings in "_site.yml" (described below)
Normally R Markdown renders documents as self-contained HTML. However, render_site
ensures that dependencies (e.g. CSS, JavaScript, images, etc.) remain in external files. CSS/JavaScript libraries are copied to a "site_libs" sub-directory and plots/images are copied to "_files" sub-directories.
You can remove the files generated by render_site
using the clean_site
function.