On Tuesday, March 22, 2016 at 11:48:14 AM UTC-5, Mauro wrote: > > > On Tuesday, March 22, 2016 at 11:00:13 AM UTC-5, Mauro wrote: > > > > I think you can do it with Jupyter notebooks, which also work with > R. > > > > > > Are you thinking of the RISE extension (https://github.com/damianavila/ > > RISE.git) for Jupyter notebooks? > > I couldn't say whether RISE is what is needed as I haven't used it > myself, I just saw others using it. So, this was really not helpful, > sorry! > > > I think I would need to use more than one notebook to incorporate both > Julia > > and R cells in a notebook, unless I use the RCall package for Julia. But > that > > solution doesn't highlight R code. > > To geek-out, you could use emacs orgmode + babel + > https://github.com/eschulte/epresent. Although, last time I tried it > (JuliaCon 2015), Julia code blocks didn't work well. And just having > checked, the required emacs-package has not been updated in a long time: > https://github.com/gjkerns/ob-julia/blob/master/ob-julia-doc.org >
Been there, done that. Didn't really have a whole lot of fun. > > > On Tue, 2016-03-22 at 16:46, Douglas Bates <[email protected]> > wrote: > > > This issue comes up in various forms from time to time. I will be > giving > > a > > > presentation in a few days about mixed-effects models in R and > Julia. If > > it > > > was an R-only presentation I would probably use the the RStudio > tools to > > create > > > slides from .Rmd (R Markdown) sources. I would appreciate > descriptions of > > how > > > others create presentations slides with Julia code. >
