Reputation: 34907
I've previously asked about the commands for converting R Markdown to HTML.
What is a good way to convert R Markdown files to PDF documents?
A good solution would preserve as much as possible of the content (e.g., images, equations, html tables, etc.). The solution needs to be able to be run from the command-line. A good solution would also be cross-platform, and ideally minimise dependencies to make it easier to share makefiles and so forth.
Specifically, there are a lot of options:
markdown
package in R, which options to specifypandoc
, a package built into R, or something elseHere's an example rmd file that presumably provides a reasonable test of any proposed solution. It was used as the basis for this blog post.
Upvotes: 135
Views: 132305
Reputation: 177
Follow these simple steps :
1: In the Rmarkdown script run Knit(Ctrl+Shift+K) 2: Then after the html markdown is opened click Open in Browser(top left side) and the html is opened in your web browser 3: Then use Ctrl+P and save as PDF .
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 386
If you don't want to install anything you can output html. Then open the html file - it should open in a browser window, then right click to print. In the print window, select "save as pdf" in the bottom right hand corner if you're on a Mac. Voila!
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 34907
rmarkdown package:
There is now an rmarkdown
package available on github that interfaces with Pandoc.
It includes a render
function. The documentation makes it pretty clear how to convert rmarkdown to pdf among a range of other formats. This includes including output formats in the rmarkdown file or running supplying an output format to the rend function. E.g.,
render("input.Rmd", "pdf_document")
Command-line:
When I run render
from the command-line (e.g., using a makefile), I sometimes have issues with pandoc not being found. Presumably, it is not on the search path.
The following answer explains how to add pandoc to the R environment.
So for example, on my computer running OSX, where I have a copy of pandoc through RStudio, I can use the following:
Rscript -e "Sys.setenv(RSTUDIO_PANDOC='/Applications/RStudio.app/Contents/MacOS/pandoc');library(rmarkdown); library(utils); render('input.Rmd', 'pdf_document')"
So, a number of people have suggested that Pandoc is the way to go. See notes below about the importance of having an up-to-date version of Pandoc.
I used the following command to convert R Markdown to HTML (i.e., a variant of this makefile), where RMDFILE
is the name of the R Markdown file without the .rmd
component (it also assumes that the extension is .rmd
and not .Rmd
).
RMDFILE=example-r-markdown
Rscript -e "require(knitr); require(markdown); knit('$RMDFILE.rmd', '$RMDFILE.md'); markdownToHTML('$RMDFILE.md', '$RMDFILE.html', options=c('use_xhml'))"
and then this command to convert to pdf
Pandoc -s example-r-markdown.html -o example-r-markdown.pdf
markdownToHTML
function meant that image references are to files and not to data stored in the HTML file (i.e., I removed 'base64_images'
from the option list).As mentioned by @daroczig, it's important to have an up-to-date version of Pandoc in order to output pdfs. On Ubuntu as of 15th June 2012, I was stuck with version 1.8.1 of Pandoc in the package manager, but it seems from the change log that for pdf support you need at least version 1.9+ of Pandoc.
Thus, I installed caball-install
.
And then ran:
cabal update
cabal install pandoc
Pandoc was installed in ~/.cabal/bin/pandoc
Thus, when I ran pandoc
it was still seeing the old version.
See here for adding to the path.
Upvotes: 74
Reputation: 375
Only two steps:
Install the latest release "pandoc" from here:
Call the function pandoc
in the library(knitr)
library(knitr)
pandoc('input.md', format = 'latex')
Thus, you can convert your "input.md" into "input.pdf".
Upvotes: 10
Reputation: 41
I found using R studio the easiest way, but if wanting to control from the command line, then a simple R script can do the trick using rmarkdown render command (as mentioned above). Full script details here
#!/usr/bin/env R
# Render R markdown to PDF.
# Invoke with:
# > R -q -f make.R --args my_report.Rmd
# load packages
require(rmarkdown)
# require a parameter naming file to render
if (length(args) == 0) {
stop("Error: missing file operand", call. = TRUE)
} else {
# read report to render from command line
for (rmd in commandArgs(trailingOnly = TRUE)) {
# render Rmd to PDF
if ( grepl("\\.Rmd$", rmd) && file.exists(rmd)) {
render(rmd, pdf_document())
} else {
print(paste("Ignoring: ", rmd))
}
}
}
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 6396
Right now (August 2014) You could use RStudio for converting R Markdown to PDF. Basically, RStudio use pandoc to convert Rmd to PDF.
You could change metadata to:
For more details - http://rmarkdown.rstudio.com/pdf_document_format.html
Upvotes: 15
Reputation: 28612
I think you really need pandoc, which great software was designed and built just for this task :) Besides pdf, you could convert your md file to e.g. docx or odt among others.
Well, installing an up-to-date version of Pandoc might be challanging on Linux (as you would need the entire haskell-platform
˙to build from the sources), but really easy on Windows/Mac with only a few megabytes of download.
If you have the brewed/knitted markdown file you can just call pandoc
in e.g bash or with the system
function within R. A POC demo of that latter is implemented in the Ṗandoc.convert
function of my little package (which you must be terribly bored of as I try to point your attention there at every opportunity).
Upvotes: 23
Reputation: 34907
For an option that looks more like what you get when you print from a browser, wkhtmltopdf
provides one option.
On Ubuntu
sudo apt-get install wkhtmltopdf
And then the same command as for the pandoc example to get to the HTML:
RMDFILE=example-r-markdown
Rscript -e "require(knitr); require(markdown); knit('$RMDFILE.rmd', '$RMDFILE.md'); markdownToHTML('$RMDFILE.md', '$RMDFILE.html', options=c('use_xhml'))"
and then
wkhtmltopdf example-r-markdown.html example-r-markdown.pdf
The resulting file looked like this. It did not seem to handle the MathJax (this issue is discussed here), and the page breaks are ugly. However, in some cases, such a style might be preferred over a more LaTeX style presentation.
Upvotes: 10