On May 23, 2014, at 4:49 PM, Duncan Murdoch wrote:

> On 23/05/2014, 6:31 PM, Verena Weinbir wrote:
>> Hello!
>> 
>> I'd like to illustrate the data of an csv file as a nice table and copy it
>> into my word-sheet. Currently, I am trying this with the xtable () function
>> (latex output).
> 
> I'm not sure what you mean by copying it into your word-sheet, but latex has 
> a lot of flexibility in formatting tables.  See the 
> http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/LaTeX/Tables page for a description.  It might 
> be that you can get xtables to produce output suitable for that; you can 
> certainly get the tables package to do it.  (The vignette gives an example of 
> a multi-page table, but doesn't include any rotated ones.)
> 

I am also uncertain about the meaning of "word-sheet". If it means an Excel 
worksheet, then the strategy I use is to copy the output of the 
table()-function to an Excel worksheet and then use the text-to-columns choice 
off the Data-menu.

In preparation for multi-page tables I simply use:

 options(width=250)

The advantage in Excel is the option to use conditional formatting, for 
instance taking a a large set of cross-tabulated estimates of mortality risk 
and highlight the higher estimates that have a sufficient number of events to 
be credible and grey out the estimates based on small numbers of events. It's 
not my preferred method of analysis but it gets around the unfortuante fact 
that actuaries are  not accustomed to see output from regression models using 
spline transformation of predictors. I'm sometimes surprised at the patterns 
this displays. It is a "non-parametric" method of displaying multi-dimensional 
relationships. I suspect there are R packages that I have not yet explored that 
might have similar or superior power. The 'vcd' package is one that has 
considerable power.


> Duncan Murdoch
> 
>> 
>> Example Code:
>> 
>> dfchar <- data.frame(Author = dat$author, Year = dat$year, Age = dat$age)
>> xtable(dfchar)
>> 
>> Now, since there are some more variables and many more data sets I have to
>> include, I need to change the table orientation to landscape*. *The size of
>> the table should run over several pages.
>> 
>> Does anyone know how to implement this with the xtable () function or can
>> provide me with an alternative function?
>> 
>> Thank you very much in advance!
>> 
>> Verena
>> 
>>      [[alternative HTML version deleted]]
>> 
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>> 
> 
> ______________________________________________
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David Winsemius
Alameda, CA, USA

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