When transferring data frame output to word it's easy to use: write.table(df, file="clipboard",sep="\t") #df is your dataframe in this case
Now you can go to Word en paste your table with tabs. Good luck Bart Joosen > On Thursday 09 February 2006 20:08, Patrick Burns wrote: >> One approach is to use LyX (http://www.lyx.org/). >> This is a lot like using Word or other word processors >> but it creates LaTeX. You probably won't need to >> know anything about TeX for a long time unless you >> are doing really weird things. >> >> Patrick Burns >> [EMAIL PROTECTED] >> +44 (0)20 8525 0696 >> http://www.burns-stat.com >> (home of S Poetry and "A Guide for the Unwilling S User") >> >> roger bos wrote: >> >Yeah, but I don't understand LaTeX at all. Can you point me to a good >> >beginners guide? >> > >> >Thanks, >> > >> >Roger >> > >> >On 2/9/06, Barry Rowlingson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> >>Tom Backer Johnsen wrote: >> >>>I have just started looking at R, and are getting more and more >> >> >> >>irritated >> >> >> >>>at myself for not having done that before. >> >>> >> >>>However, one of the things I have not found in the documentation is >> >>>some >> >>>way of preparing output from R for convenient formatting into >> >>>something >> >>>like MS Word. >> >> >> >>Well whatever you do, don't start looking at LaTeX, because that will >> >>get you even more irritated at yourself for not having done it before. >> >> >> >>LaTeX is to Word as R is to what? SPSS? >> >> >> >>I've still not seen a pretty piece of mathematics - or even text - in >> >>Word. >> >> >> >>Barry ______________________________________________ [email protected] mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help PLEASE do read the posting guide! http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html
