An html fragment is suitable for inclusion into an external html page. See
html_document
for full details - this is a minor variation that
assumes you will include the output into an existing document (e.g. a blog
post).
html_fragment( number_sections = FALSE, section_divs = TRUE, fig_width = 7, fig_height = 5, fig_retina = 2, fig_caption = TRUE, dev = "png", df_print = "default", mathjax = TRUE, includes = NULL, keep_md = FALSE, md_extensions = NULL, pandoc_args = NULL, ... )
number_sections |
|
---|---|
section_divs | Wrap sections in <div> tags, and attach identifiers to the enclosing <div> rather than the header itself. |
fig_width | Default width (in inches) for figures |
fig_height | Default height (in inches) for figures |
fig_retina | Scaling to perform for retina displays (defaults to 2, which
currently works for all widely used retina displays). Set to |
fig_caption |
|
dev | Graphics device to use for figure output (defaults to png) |
df_print | Method to be used for printing data frames. Valid values
include "default", "kable", "tibble", and "paged". The "default" method
uses a corresponding S3 method of |
mathjax |
|
includes | Named list of additional content to include within the
document (typically created using the |
keep_md | Keep the markdown file generated by knitting. |
md_extensions | Markdown extensions to be added or removed from the
default definition or R Markdown. See the |
pandoc_args | Additional command line options to pass to pandoc |
... | Additional arguments passed to |
R Markdown output format to pass to render
See the online
documentation for additional details on using the html_fragment
format.