Many of you are using Sweave for making statistical reports. I thought it might be helpful to some to see an example of the setup I use (in Linux). For those of you who have not yet discovered the power and productivity gains from using Fritz Leisch's wonderful package, I encourage you to give Sweave a try.
%File: model.nw %Usage: % Put library(Hmisc;Design;tools} in .First % Sweave model - runs model.nw to produce model.tex and % graphics files in graphics/ % Sweave shell script defined as echo "Sweave(\"$1.nw\")" | R --no-save % latex or pdflatex model; bibtex model; latex or pdflatex model % To get .R file: Stangle model \documentclass{article} \usepackage{relsize,setspace} % used by latex(describe( )) \newcommand{\co}[1]{\texttt{\smaller #1}} \title{Analysis} \author{Frank E Harrell Jr} \begin{document} \SweaveOpts{prefix.string=graphics/plot} \setkeys{Gin}{width=1.0\textwidth} \maketitle <<echo=F>>= Hmisc.version <- package.description('Hmisc')['Version'] Design.version <- package.description('Design')['Version'] @ All calculations were done using \Sexpr{R.version.string} \cite{Roriginal} on RedHat Linux 9.0, using version \Sexpr{Hmisc.version} of the \texttt{Hmisc} package and version \Sexpr{Design.version} of the \texttt{Design} package. \section{Descriptive Statistics} <<results=tex>>= load('mydata.sav') latex(describe(mydata), file='') # generate LaTeX code in place @ The variable clustering diagram below shows which variables in the dataset are interrelated. The $y$-axis is the Spearman $\rho^2$ (squared rank correlation coefficient). \co{addon} and \co{mica} cannot be considered together because of an undefined correlation between them. \co{addon} correlates weakly with \co{sodm} (only). \co{usedlabd} is always unity when it is not missing, so it is also omitted from variable clustering. \begin{center} <<fig=T>>= plot(varclus(~.-addon-usedlabd, data=mydata)) @ \end{center} \section{Analysis of Dose Effects} . . . . \bibliography{/home/feh/bib/feh.bib} \bibliographystyle{abbrv} \end{document} For more information about reproducible statistical reporting, literate programming, and Sweave see http://hesweb1.med.virginia.edu/biostat/s/LiveDoc.html --- Frank E Harrell Jr Prof. of Biostatistics & Statistics Div. of Biostatistics & Epidem. Dept. of Health Evaluation Sciences U. Virginia School of Medicine http://hesweb1.med.virginia.edu/biostat ______________________________________________ [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list https://www.stat.math.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help