In my last two postings, I introduced a way to create slide presentations by writing them in a simple text file, with Markdown formatting, and add some of the “infinite canvas” features of Impress.js.
In January I wrote about using Macdown to write in Markdown, a convention for writing in plain text while encoding the structure of your document—headers, block quotes, lists, footnotes, etc.—using ...
There are lots of ways to share results of your R analysis: Word documents, interactive apps, even in the body of an email. But sometimes, you want a slide presentation. It’s easy to generate a ...