vignette {utils} | R Documentation |
View a specified package vignette, or list the available ones.
vignette(topic, package = NULL, lib.loc = NULL, all = TRUE)
## S3 method for class 'vignette'
print(x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'vignette'
edit(name, ...)
topic |
a character string giving the (base) name of the vignette to view. If omitted, all vignettes from all installed packages are listed. |
package |
a character vector with the names of packages to
search through, or |
lib.loc |
a character vector of directory names of R libraries,
or |
all |
logical; if |
x , name |
Object of class |
... |
Ignored by the |
Function vignette
returns an object of the same class, the
print method opens a viewer for it.
The program specified by the pdfviewer
option is used for
viewing PDF versions of vignettes.
If several vignettes have PDF/HTML versions with base name identical
to topic
, the first one found is used.
If no topics are given, all available vignettes are listed. The
corresponding information is returned in an object of class
"packageIQR"
.
The edit
method copies the R code extracted from the vignette
to a temporary file and opens the file in an editor (see
edit
). This makes it very easy to execute the commands
line by line, modify them in any way you want to help you test
variants, etc.
browseVignettes
for an HTML-based vignette browser.
## List vignettes from all *attached* packages
vignette(all = FALSE)
## List vignettes from all *installed* packages (can take a long time!):
vignette(all = TRUE)
## Not run:
## Open the grid intro vignette
vignette("grid")
## The same
v1 <- vignette("grid")
print(v1)
## Now let us have a closer look at the code
edit(v1)
## An alternative way of extracting the code,
## R file is written to current working directory
Stangle(v1$file)
## A package can have more than one vignette (package grid has several):
vignette(package = "grid")
vignette("rotated")
## The same, but without searching for it:
vignette("rotated", package = "grid")
## End(Not run)