chrish...@psyctc.org wrote:
I've changed the subject line a bit here as Max is asking such a
fundamental question.
Max Kuhn sent the following at 01/05/2010 19:22:
Chris,
...
Why is it R Core's job to fulfill your wants and desires? I have a
hard time thinking that very busy
Well, there's always RExcel to get all your R stuff into something M$
Ruffice can understand. And they're even working on a Word link if I got it
right.
Cheers
Joris
On Fri, May 7, 2010 at 12:24 PM, Duncan Murdoch murdoch.dun...@gmail.comwrote:
chrish...@psyctc.org wrote:
I've changed the
For simply doing tables xtable has done some nice work for me.
--- On Fri, 5/7/10, Joris Meys jorism...@gmail.com wrote:
From: Joris Meys jorism...@gmail.com
Subject: Re: [R] What is the best way to have R output tables in an MS Word
format? (shaping R core)
To: Duncan Murdoch
Hi Chris,
Following this thread, I started experimenting with the R2wd package myself.
I wrote to the developer who gave me some promising news (that is - that an
updated package is expected to be released in the next couple of months)
I wrote about this, and gave an example session on what I
I remembered this post too:
https://stat.ethz.ch/pipermail/r-help/2009-September/212084.html
I wonder if there is a beta version of Duncan's package.
Thanks,
Max
On Thu, May 6, 2010 at 12:33 PM, Tal Galili tal.gal...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Chris,
Following this thread, I started
Tal Galili sent the following at 06/05/2010 17:33:
Hi Chris,
Following this thread, I started experimenting with the R2wd package myself.
I wrote to the developer who gave me some promising news (that is - that
an updated package is expected to be released in the next couple of months)
I've changed the subject line a bit here as Max is asking such a
fundamental question.
Max Kuhn sent the following at 01/05/2010 19:22:
Chris,
...
Why is it R Core's job to fulfill your wants and desires? I have a
hard time thinking that very busy people would spend extra time doing
Hi Max,
It looks like most of answers were towards to the statisticians you work with
(i.e. R - Word). For yourself, if you just worry about converting the PDF
reports from your statisticians to Word, here is another link with a more
comprehensive review besides the two online apps Prof.
Thanks Tal Thomas, I am now experimenting with both SWord and R2wd and
both are certainly a huge step forward for me, tied as I am to Word and
the Windoze/M$ world for now.
Chris
Tal Galili sent the following at 01/05/2010 09:44:
Hi all,
I forwarded this question to the r-com mailing
On 05/03/2010 08:47 AM, Chris Evans wrote:
Thanks Tal Thomas, I am now experimenting with both SWord and R2wd and
both are certainly a huge step forward for me, tied as I am to Word and
the Windoze/M$ world for now.
Chris
Note that many of the general solutions offered produce documents
On 05/01/2010 08:13 AM, Max Gunther wrote:
Dear R list,
Our statisticians usually give us results back in a PDF format. I would like
to be able to copy and past tables from R output directly into a Microsoft
Word table since this will save us tons of time, be more accurate to
minimize human
It's interesting to see this coming up quite soon after my posting
asking for light formatting (tabs, simple tables, one day embedded
graphics) in a default output pane in R.
Greg Snow kindly pointed me to sword and I've tried it and it seems to
work and is a bit friendlier than ODFweave or the
Hi all,
I forwarded this question to the r-com mailing list, and received the
following reply from Thomas Baier :
Hi Tal,
two solutions immediately come to my mind: SWord
(http://rcom.univie.ac.at) and R2wd (from CRAN).
If creating a paper in Word, then SWord may be the better choice, if you
On Sat, May 1, 2010 at 3:41 AM, Chris Evans chrish...@psyctc.org wrote:
It's interesting to see this coming up quite soon after my posting
asking for light formatting (tabs, simple tables, one day embedded
graphics) in a default output pane in R.
Greg Snow kindly pointed me to sword and I've
Another option is to use ascii package http://eusebe.github.com/ascii/.
Just choose your favorite markup language
(asciidochttp://www.methods.co.nz/asciidoc/,
txt2tags http://txt2tags.sourceforge.net/,
restructuredtexthttp://docutils.sourceforge.net/rst.html,
org-mode http://orgmode.org/ or
Chris,
Come on R core team: I am sure there are a large number of users like
Max Gunther and myself who would find this a huge help and I'm equally
sure there are an even larger number of potential users who would change
to R if we had formatted tables in the output window and the option to
I normally do not post thank-yous to listservs but this is really quite a
remarkable response and I really appreciate the guidance. I am certain that
this will increase the accuracy and productivity of our research.
Best of wishes,
Max
Max Gunther, PhD
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Dear R list,
Our statisticians usually give us results back in a PDF format. I would like
to be able to copy and past tables from R output directly into a Microsoft
Word table since this will save us tons of time, be more accurate to
minimize human copying errors and help us update data in our
On Apr 30, 2010, at 6:13 PM, Max Gunther wrote:
Dear R list,
Our statisticians usually give us results back in a PDF format. I
would like
to be able to copy and past tables from R output directly into a
Microsoft
Word table since this will save us tons of time, be more accurate to
On Fri, Apr 30, 2010 at 11:13 PM, Max Gunther
max.gunt...@vanderbilt.edu wrote:
Dear R list,
Our statisticians usually give us results back in a PDF format. I would like
to be able to copy and past tables from R output directly into a Microsoft
Word table since this will save us tons of time,
On 04/30/2010 05:13 PM, Max Gunther wrote:
Dear R list,
Our statisticians usually give us results back in a PDF format. I would like
to be able to copy and past tables from R output directly into a Microsoft
Word table since this will save us tons of time, be more accurate to
minimize human
On Apr 30, 2010, at 5:13 PM, Max Gunther wrote:
Dear R list,
Our statisticians usually give us results back in a PDF format. I would like
to be able to copy and past tables from R output directly into a Microsoft
Word table since this will save us tons of time, be more accurate to
minimize
When I work with clients who want to cut and paste to word or powerpoint I
usually use the odfWeave package, set up a template file with the tables and
graphs (possibly other output), then I run that through odfWeave and then use
openoffice to save the results as a word file that I can send to
odfWeave might be a less daunting option here, as it can output results in
some .doc formats. I have no idea how well tables would survive the
translations, however.
-- Bert
Bert Gunter
Genentech Nonclinical Statistics
-Original Message-
From: r-help-boun...@r-project.org
Greg Snow wrote:
When I work with clients who want to cut and paste to word or
powerpoint I usually use the odfWeave package, set up a template file
with the tables and graphs (possibly other output), then I run that
through odfWeave and then use openoffice to save the results as a
word file
Greg Snow wrote:
When I work with clients who want to cut and paste to word or
powerpoint I usually use the odfWeave package, set up a template file
with the tables and graphs (possibly other output), then I run that
through odfWeave and then use openoffice to save the results as a
word file
On 04/30/2010 05:45 PM, Marc Schwartz wrote:
On Apr 30, 2010, at 5:13 PM, Max Gunther wrote:
Dear R list,
Our statisticians usually give us results back in a PDF format. I would like
to be able to copy and past tables from R output directly into a Microsoft
Word table since this will save us
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