https://github.com/juke34/jdpackage
What the Package Does (One Line, Title Case)
https://github.com/juke34/jdpackage
Last synced: 14 days ago
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What the Package Does (One Line, Title Case)
- Host: GitHub
- URL: https://github.com/juke34/jdpackage
- Owner: Juke34
- License: other
- Created: 2024-06-14T08:32:59.000Z (almost 2 years ago)
- Default Branch: master
- Last Pushed: 2024-06-14T10:32:37.000Z (almost 2 years ago)
- Last Synced: 2025-03-05T04:38:49.542Z (over 1 year ago)
- Language: R
- Homepage: https://juke34.github.io/jdpackage/
- Size: 345 KB
- Stars: 0
- Watchers: 1
- Forks: 0
- Open Issues: 0
-
Metadata Files:
- Readme: README.Rmd
- License: LICENSE
Awesome Lists containing this project
README
---
output: github_document
---
```{r, include = FALSE}
knitr::opts_chunk$set(
collapse = TRUE,
comment = "#>",
fig.path = "man/figures/README-",
out.width = "100%"
)
```
# jdpackage
The goal of jdpackage is to ...
## Installation
You can install the development version of jdpackage from [GitHub](https://github.com/) with:
``` r
# install.packages("devtools")
devtools::install_github("Juke34/jdpackage")
```
## Example
This is a basic example which shows you how to solve a common problem:
```{r example}
library(jdpackage)
## basic example code
```
What is special about using `README.Rmd` instead of just `README.md`? You can include R chunks like so:
```{r cars}
summary(cars)
```
You'll still need to render `README.Rmd` regularly, to keep `README.md` up-to-date. `devtools::build_readme()` is handy for this.
You can also embed plots, for example:
```{r pressure, echo = FALSE}
plot(pressure)
```
In that case, don't forget to commit and push the resulting figure files, so they display on GitHub and CRAN.