![]() The `comment` engine to comment out any content. # Before: forcing everything onto a single line. These comments start with `#|` (how would you pronounce this?). Now you can write them on multiple lines as special comments in the beginning of the chunk body. Previously, you must write all chunk options on one line in the chunk header. When things become mature, they often become boring, too, such as adults. I want to look back and see if I have done any meaningful work at all. I have almost lost track of time since the pandemic. For a full list, please check out the (). ![]() No huge new features in recent years, but a few little highlights may be worth mentioning. **knitr** has become quite mature, and probably inevitably boring as time goes by. You can apply what you have learned about **knitr** to both Quarto and R Markdown documents. Both of them are built on top of **knitr.*** Those who are familiar with my previous talks may be surprised that I'm not going to talk about "down" packages.īecause **knitr** is a common cornerstone of Quarto and R Markdown. The "down" packages won't die any time soon. Most "down" packages have had or will have equivalents in Quarto: Right, I won't let you "down" as usual (rmarkdown, bookdown, blogdown, pagedown, etc.). # Wait, so you are not talking about any "down" packages this time? # Highlights of the knitr package from the past two years ![]() Highlights of the knitr package from the past two yearsĬlass: center, middle, inverse, title-slide
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