pkgdown is designed to make it quick and easy to build a website for
your package. You can see pkgdown in action at
http://pkgdown.r-lib.org: this is the output of pkgdown applied to the
latest version of pkgdown. Learn more in vignette("pkgdown")
or
?build_site
.
# Install release version from CRAN
install.packages("pkgdown")
# Install development version from GitHub
devtools::install_github("r-lib/pkgdown")
Run pkgdown from the package directory each time you release your package:
pkgdown::build_site()
This will generate a docs/
directory. The home page will be generated
from your package’s README.md
, and a function reference will be
generated from the documentation in the man/
directory. If you are
using GitHub, the easiest way to make this your package website is to
check into git, then go settings for your repo and make sure that the
GitHub pages source is set to “master branch /docs folder”.
The package also includes an RStudio add-in which you can bind to a
keyboard shortcut. I recommend Cmd + Shift + W
: it uses Cmd + Shift,
like all other package development worksheets, it replaces a rarely used
command (close all tabs), and the W is mnemonic for website.
To customise your site, create _pkgdown.yml
and modify it as described
in the documentation. Alternatively, you can also use
pkgdown/_pkgdown.yml
if you need other files to customise your site.
As at last count, pkgdown is used by over 1600 packages.
Here are a few examples created by people contributors to pkgdown:
-
bayesplot [source]: plotting functions for posterior analysis, model checking, and MCMC diagnostics.
-
valr [source]: read and manipulate genome intervals and signals.
-
mkin [source]: calculation routines based on the FOCUS Kinetics Report
-
NMF [source]: a framework to perform non-negative matrix factorization (NMF).
Comparing the output with the source is a great way to learn new pkgdown techniques (particularly because ironically, the pkgdown documentation isn’t very good yet)
Please note that this project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct. By participating in this project you agree to abide by its terms.