Complete tutorial and code See the full tutorial here. You can also see the tutorial’s code here and the code for the final API here.
Complete tutorial and code See the full tutorial here. You can also see the tutorial’s code here and the code for the final API here.
tl;dr If you want to skip the explanation and justification for why you might want separate bibliographies, you can skip down to the example section, or just go see some example files at GitHub. Why use separate bibliographies? In academic articles, it’s common to have a supplemental appendix with extra tables, figures, robustness checks, additional math, proofs, and other details.
I love posts that allow me to merge some of my addictions.
Tip If you’re here for the DOI matching script, the link is here. Quarto is a great tool for reproducible research. It is also a great tool for building websites. After about a decade of Wordpress-based websites, I’ve moved to Quarto primarily for two reasons. First, most of my content is largely static.
Merci à Hugo Gruson pour ses commentaires utiles sur cette traduction! Le logiciel libre Pandoc par John MacFarlane est un outil très utile : par exemple, Yanina Bellini Saibene, community manager de rOpenSci, a récemment demandé à Maëlle si elle pouvait convertir un document Google en livre Quarto.Maëlle a répondu à la demande en combinant Pandoc (conversion de docx en HTML puis en Markdown par le biais de pandoc::pandoc_convert()) et
The Pandoc CLI by John MacFarlane is a really useful tool: for instance, rOpenSci community manager Yanina Bellini Saibene recently asked Maëlle whether she could convert a Google Document into a Quarto book.Maëlle solved the request with a combination of Pandoc (conversion from docx to HTML then to Markdown through pandoc::pandoc_convert()) and XPath.You can find the resulting experimental package quartificate on GitHub.Pandoc is not only
When extending pandoc (or Quarto) with Lua filters, we interact with so-called Lua userdata objects. These objects are used to wrap document AST elements, making them accessible from Lua scripts. They mostly behave like normal Lua tables. This post is intended as a quick overview, listing interesting properties of userdata objects.
When extending pandoc (or Quarto) with Lua filters, we interact with so-called Lua userdata objects. These objects are used to wrap document AST elements, making them accessible from Lua scripts. They mostly behave like normal Lua tables. This post is intended as a quick overview, listing interesting properties of userdata objects.
Sitemaps are an easy way to list all pages that a search engine should crawl and index. Quarto supports the standard, XML based Sitemap Protocol, although that fact is a bit hidden in the docs. Quarto will automatically produce a sitemap if the website’s URL is given as site-url property: website: title: tarleb site-url: 'https://tarleb.com' site-path: '/' The URL will contain a colon :, which is why the YAML value must be put in quotes.
Sitemaps are an easy way to list all pages that a search engine should crawl and index. Quarto supports the standard, XML based Sitemap Protocol, although that fact is a bit hidden in the docs. Quarto will automatically produce a sitemap if the website’s URL is given as site-url property: website: title: tarleb site-url: 'https://tarleb.com' site-path: '/' The URL will contain a colon :, which is why the YAML value must be put in quotes.