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,
...
)A huxtable.
Not used.
An existing Workbook object. By default, a new workbook will be created.
Name for the worksheet where the huxtable will be created. The worksheet will be created if it doesn't exist already.
If TRUE, print any caption in the row above or below the table.
Number. Write data starting at the given row and column.
An object of class Workbook.
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.
wb <- as_Workbook(jams)
if (FALSE) { # \dontrun{
openxlsx::saveWorkbook(
wb,
"my-excel-file.xlsx"
)
} # }
# 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"
)