Reputation: 67
I am using the following R code to call xtable
and generate a LaTeX table for a Sweave document.
ifelse(LaTeX==1, print(xtable(rule1.results.noTC, caption="Rule 1 Results 0 Transaction Costs",
digits=c(1,2,4,4,4), display=c("d","d","f","f","f"))),
print(rule1.results))
This produces the following LaTeX
% latex table generated in R 3.0.1 by xtable 1.7-1 package
% Sun Jul 28 16:54:42 2013
\begin{table}[ht]
\centering
\begin{tabular}{rrrrr}
\hline
& L & profits & annCumulExReturn & sharpe \\
\hline
1 & 5 & -888.8215 & -0.1501 & -4.3939 \\
2 & 10 & -909.8941 & -0.1533 & -6.8882 \\
3 & 20 & -893.6245 & -0.1509 & -6.9081 \\
4 & 40 & -865.6764 & -0.1466 & -9.8462 \\
5 & 80 & -832.4700 & -0.1417 & -11.7260 \\
6 & 160 & -757.0690 & -0.1305 & -16.3088 \\
7 & 320 & -626.9162 & -0.1118 & -31.6134 \\
8 & 640 & -340.8740 & -0.0730 & -44.2321 \\
\hline
\end{tabular}
\caption{Rule 1 Results with Transaction Costs}
\end{table}
When I convert this to pdf, I get a nice table. However, it is followed by a weird note: [1] "
And I get several of these if I plot multiple tables in a row. How can I eliminate this either via R's xtable
or by editing the LaTeX code.
Thanks
Upvotes: 1
Views: 314
Reputation: 44525
I can't say for sure without your data and an example of the .tex file, but I'm pretty confident this is due to your use of ifelse
. I imagine the following will not give you the weird print out:
if(LaTeX==1) {
print(xtable(rule1.results.noTC,caption="Rule 1 Results 0 Transaction Costs",
digits=c(1,2,4,4,4), display=c("d","d","f","f","f")))
} else {
print(rule1.results))
}
This is because ifelse
returns its result, which you're also printing. See, for example:
> ifelse(TRUE,print("true"),print("false"))
[1] "true"
[1] "true"
Upvotes: 1