Creates skeleton README files with possible stubs for
a high-level description of the project/package and its goals
R code to install from GitHub, if GitHub usage detected
a basic example
Use Rmd
if you want a rich intermingling of code and output. Use md
for a
basic README. README.Rmd
will be automatically added to .Rbuildignore
.
The resulting README is populated with default YAML frontmatter and R fenced
code blocks (md
) or chunks (Rmd
).
If you use Rmd
, you'll still need to render it regularly, to keep
README.md
up-to-date. devtools::build_readme()
is handy for this. You
could also use GitHub Actions to re-render README.Rmd
every time you push.
An example workflow can be found in the examples/
directory here:
https://github.com/r-lib/actions/.
If the current project is a Git repo, then use_readme_rmd()
automatically
configures a pre-commit hook that helps keep README.Rmd
and README.md
,
synchronized. The hook creates friction if you try to commit when
README.Rmd
has been edited more recently than README.md
. If this hook
causes more problems than it solves for you, it is implemented in
.git/hooks/pre-commit
, which you can modify or even delete.
use_readme_rmd(open = rlang::is_interactive())use_readme_md(open = rlang::is_interactive())
Open the newly created file for editing? Happens in RStudio, if
applicable, or via utils::file.edit()
otherwise.
if (FALSE) {
use_readme_rmd()
use_readme_md()
}
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