Yes! You are correct. If you use R studio, you can use RMarkdown which involves an .rmd file. For students in my class on assignments, they are welcome to turn in the .rmd file and .pdf file (instead of the .r file and a .pdf file). Another possibility: if you use latex and want math equations and R code/outputs in the same pdf. Then there is R Sweave. I use this sometimes.
Have been waiting for a long time for statistics and R ♥
more videos are coming!
Always efficient, thanks for sharing
You are welcome :)
I believe to remember there was a tool to export the r directly to nicely formatted markup / PDF, forgot what though.
Yes! You are correct. If you use R studio, you can use RMarkdown which involves an .rmd file. For students in my class on assignments, they are welcome to turn in the .rmd file and .pdf file (instead of the .r file and a .pdf file).
Another possibility: if you use latex and want math equations and R code/outputs in the same pdf. Then there is R Sweave. I use this sometimes.