This document provides quick references to the most commonly used R Markdown syntax. See the following articles for more in-depth treatment of all the capabilities of R Markdown:
*italic* **bold**
_italic_ __bold__
# Header 1
## Header 2
### Header 3
Unordered List:
* Item 1
* Item 2
+ Item 2a
+ Item 2b
Ordered List:
1. Item 1
2. Item 2
3. Item 3
+ Item 3a
+ Item 3b
R code will be evaluated and printed
```{r}
summary(cars$dist)
summary(cars$speed)
```
There were `r nrow(cars)` cars studied
Use a plain http address or add a link to a phrase:
http://example.com
[linked phrase](http://example.com)
Images on the web or local files in the same directory:
![](http://example.com/logo.png)
![optional caption text](figures/img.png)
A friend once said:
> It's always better to give
> than to receive.
Plain code blocks are displayed in a fixed-width font but not evaulated
```
This text is displayed verbatim / preformatted
```
We defined the `add` function to
compute the sum of two numbers.
LaTeX Equations
Inline equation:
$equation$
Display equation:
$$ equation $$
Three or more asterisks or dashes:
******
------
First Header | Second Header
------------- | -------------
Content Cell | Content Cell
Content Cell | Content Cell
Reference Style Links and Images
A [linked phrase][id].
At the bottom of the document:
[id]: http://example.com/ "Title"
Images
![alt text][id]
At the bottom of the document:
[id]: figures/img.png "Title"
End a line with two or more spaces:
Roses are red,
Violets are blue.
superscript^2^
~~strikethrough~~