Awesome
<!-- README.md is generated from README.Rmd. Please edit that file -->pkgdown <img src="man/figures/logo.png" align="right" alt="" width="120" />
<!-- badges: start --><a href="https://cran.r-project.org/package=pkgdown" class="pkgdown-release"><img src="https://www.r-pkg.org/badges/version/pkgdown" alt="CRAN Status" /></a> <a href="https://github.com/r-lib/pkgdown/actions/workflows/R-CMD-check.yaml" class="pkgdown-devel"><img src="https://github.com/r-lib/pkgdown/actions/workflows/R-CMD-check.yaml/badge.svg" alt="R-CMD-check" /></a>
<!-- badges: end -->pkgdown is designed to make it quick and easy to build a website for
your package. You can see pkgdown in action at
https://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
.
Installation
<div class=".pkgdown-release"># Install released version from CRAN
install.packages("pkgdown")
</div>
<div class=".pkgdown-devel">
# Install development version from GitHub
# install.packages("pak")
pak::pak("r-lib/pkgdown")
</div>
Usage
Get started with usethis:
# Run once to configure your package to use and deploy pkgdown
usethis::use_pkgdown_github_pages()
# Preview your site locally before publishing
pkgdown::build_site()
This adds the necessary components and sets up GitHub Actions1 for
automatic site building when deploying. Your README.md
becomes the
homepage, documentation in man/
generates a function reference, and
vignettes will be rendered into articles/
.
pkgdown 2.0.0 and Bootstrap 5
pkgdown 2.0.0 includes an upgrade from Bootstrap 3 to Bootstrap 5, which
is accompanied by a whole bunch of minor UI improvements. If you’ve
heavily customised your site, there’s a small chance that this will
break your site, so everyone needs to explicitly opt-in to the upgrade
by adding the following to _pkgdown.yml
:
template:
bootstrap: 5
Then learn about the many new ways to customise your site in
vignette("customise")
.
In the wild
At last count, pkgdown is used by over 12,000 packages. Here are a few examples:
-
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 source and output of these sites is a great way to learn new pkgdown techniques.
Code of conduct
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.
Footnotes
-
If you don’t use GitHub, you can use
usethis::use_pkgdown()
+pkgdown::build_site()
to create a website. ↩