宋时歌 wrote: > Hi Frank, > > I use Hmisc and Design in my research a lot, the LaTeX facilities are > very handy. But I don't think they can work with OpenOffice document > format (ODF), or did I miss something? > > Thanks. > > Shige
You're correct. Conversion from LaTeX to OpenOffice or Word is addressed at http://biostat.mc.vanderbilt.edu/SweaveConvert. I have had good success opening the output of tth in Firefox and copying and pasting into OpenOffice, as this operation preserves all table and other formatting. When I wrote about latex(model fit) earlier I was referring to obtaining the algebraic form of a fitted model, handling such things as restricted cubic splines and factoring out variables in interaction terms. The latex methods in Design do not produce tables of coefficients and standard errors. Frank > > On Jan 13, 2008 2:03 AM, Frank E Harrell Jr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> ??? wrote: >>> Dear All, >>> >>> I am new to odfWeave and was wondering if there are something similar >>> to the xtable package that can automatically convert model >>> coefficients into LaTeX/ODT tables? More generally, how do people who >>> use odfWeave transform model results into tables? The odfTable does >>> not seem to be able to do this (maybe I am wrong, and would appreciate >>> some demos). Thanks. >>> >>> Best, >>> Shige >> This is not related to tables, but see the latex methods in the Design >> package. There are methods for using LaTeX to typeset various kinds of >> regression model fits. >> >> Frank >> >> -- >> Frank E Harrell Jr Professor and Chair School of Medicine >> Department of Biostatistics Vanderbilt University >> > -- Frank E Harrell Jr Professor and Chair School of Medicine Department of Biostatistics Vanderbilt University ______________________________________________ R-help@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.