| as_Workbook {huxtable} | R Documentation |
If the openxlsx package is installed, Huxtables can be converted to
openxlsx::openxlsx() Worbook objects, for use in Excel documents.
as_Workbook(ht, ...) ## S3 method for class 'huxtable' as_Workbook( ht, Workbook = NULL, sheet = "Sheet 1", write_caption = TRUE, start_row = 1, start_col = 1, ... )
ht |
A huxtable. |
... |
Not used. |
Workbook |
An existing |
sheet |
Name for the worksheet where the huxtable will be created. |
write_caption |
If |
start_row, start_col |
Number. Write data starting at the given row and column. |
Use openxlsx::saveWorkbook() to save the resulting object to an Excel file.
Properties are supported with the following exceptions:
Non-numeric column widths and row heights, table width and height.
Decimal padding.
Cell padding.
Table position.
Caption width.
Huxtable tries to guess appropriate widths and height for rows and columns; numeric width() and
height() are treated as scaling factors.
Contents are only stored as numbers if a whole column is "numeric", i.e. can
be converted by as.numeric()). Otherwise, they are stored as text.
An object of class Workbook.
wb <- as_Workbook(jams)
## Not run:
openxlsx::saveWorkbook(wb,
"my-excel-file.xlsx")
## End(Not run)
# multiple sheets in a single workbook:
wb <- openxlsx::createWorkbook()
wb <- as_Workbook(jams,
Workbook = wb, sheet = "sheet1")
wb <- as_Workbook(
hux("Another", "huxtable"),
Workbook = wb,
sheet = "sheet2")