The article, letter, syllabus, and title page have a similar style and use Linux Libertine and Inconsolata fonts, British English spelling, coloured links, double spacing, back references, and numbered sections.
title: 'Title' output: githubdocument: toc: true. At the top of an RMarkdown file, change the output of the GitHub document using the following syntax. When creating your RMarkdown file, click From template, and then select GitHub Document (Markdown). Or maybe it used in another place in the IDE. This repository contains a collection of personal RMarkdown templates. To knit an RMarkdown file to this format, you can do one of the followings. I wanted this list to be easy to update, so that it can be done on GitHub directly. One of my GitHub repos is a list of JavaScript libraries that have been adapted in R. So maybe in a future version, the requirement could be often when knitr 1.34 is used. In this post, I will present you two cases in which I use GitHub Actions to automatically do that. However I don't know how the dependency graph is working but it could be suprising / puzzling for user to have a missing package after a successful `install.packages("rmarkdown")`. This is not really an issue because the **markdown** can be installed safely (by anwsering yes to install when IDE is asking). * This package is no more required and `rmarkdown::render()` works ok to build the doc. * Try to knit the document using the IDE button - a message from the IDE ask me to install the markdown package. To insert an R code chunk, you can type it manually or just press Chunks - Insert chunks or use the shortcut key. This will produce an HTML file with the same name as your Rmd and located in the same folder. This can be done in RStudio by pressing the Knit button in the toolbar, or by pressing Shift + Ctrl + K (Mac: Shift + Cmd + K ). * Restart the project using the isolated renv library where markdown is not there. In some instances, I include a copy of the R Markdown in the displayed HTML, but most of the time I assume you are reading the source and post side by side. The way to properly generate the output version of your Rmd file is by compiling it. You can find this by going to your testrepo site, clicking on the big green button Code and then copying the HTTPS link to your repository. It will now ask you for a repository URL. * Install packages with last CRAN versions - **markdown** package won't be install anymore Now go back to RStudio and start a new R Project (File > New Project). * Create a new renv project with rmarkdown document
I believe this is causing the behavior I am seeing: So **markdown** package is no more a hard dependency. Just so you know, () has moved the markdown package from Import to Suggest. I know the IDE is ke … eping track of required R dependencies and force to install missing or outdated versions. Filling this here as an issue following request