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README.Rmd
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README.Rmd
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---
output: github_document
---
<!-- README.md is generated from README.Rmd. Please edit that file -->
```{r, include = FALSE}
knitr::opts_chunk$set(
collapse = TRUE,
comment = "#>",
fig.path = "man/figures/README-",
out.width = "100%"
)
```
# The flipbookr package
<!-- badges: start -->
<!-- badges: end -->
“Flipbooks” present side-by-side, aligned, incremental
code-output evolution via automated code parsing and reconstruction.
Like physical flipbooks, they let the 'reader' watch a scene evolve at
their own pace. Flipbooks seek to reduce the guesswork involved
between code and its behavior by presenting substeps of a coding
pipeline; the reader of a flipbook observes the partial code that is
used to create “A.1”, “A.2”, “A.3” etc. all the way up to “B”.
Here's the 'minimal flipbook' template that's available with the package:
[View flipbook in a new tab](https://evamaerey.github.io/flipbookr/minimal_flipbook.html){target="_blank"}
```{r, echo = F, out.width="75%", fig.align='center'}
knitr::include_graphics("https://evamaerey.github.io/flipbookr/minimal_flipbook.gif")
```
The create a flipbook isn't hard because parsing and reconstruction of code
pipelines into substeps is automated!
flipbookr's `chunk_reveal()` disassembles a single code chunk and creates the "build" of multiple partial-code chunks on different slides (the --- is automatically generated for you too).
Check out the details on how to do this in this [*doublecrocheted* version of the same flipbook](https://evamaerey.github.io/flipbookr/minimal_flipbook_double_crochet.html){target="_blank"} (quotes the .Rmd source on some slides).
## Installation
You can install the development version of flipbookr with devtools as
follows:
``` r
devtools::install_github("EvaMaeRey/flipbookr")
```
You will most likely use this package with the rmarkdown presentation
tool, Xaringan, which is available on CRAN:
``` r
install.packages("xaringan")
```
## Template
The package includes several templates for building a flipbook that
demonstrates various flipbooking modes.
The templates can be accessed from within RStudio. For example: New File -\> RMarkdown -\> From Template -\> A Minimal Flipbook. The templates are:
- A Minimal Flipbook
- Most Flipbookr Features, [preview output](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/EvaMaeRey/flipbookr/master/inst/rmarkdown/templates/minimal-flipbook/skeleton/skeleton.Rmd){target="_blank"}
- A Python Flipbook
## How it works:
[Here's](https://evamaerey.github.io/flipbooks/flipbookr/flipbookr_building_blocks#1) a flipbook going through some of the internal flipbookr functions.
```{r sample_chunk}
library(tidyverse)
Titanic %>%
data.frame() %>%
uncount(Freq) %>%
ggplot() +
aes(x = Sex) +
geom_bar(position = "fill") +
aes(fill = Survived)
```
## Coming soon
```{r, eval = F}
chunk_reveal_live(chunk_name = "sample_chunk")
```
# how am I using rstudioapi wrong?
```{r}
download.file(url = "https://evamaerey.github.io/flipbookr/", destfile = "myhtml.html")
rstudioapi::viewer("myhtml.html")
```