The main functions currently associated with rtables are
Tables in rtables can be constructed via the layout or rtabulate tabulation frameworks or also manually. Currently manual table construction is the only way to define column spans. The main functions for manual table constructions are:
rtable: collection of rrow objects, column header and default formatrrow: collection of rcell objects and default formatrcell: collection of data objects and cell formatlibrary(rtables)tbl <- rtable(
header = c("Treatement\nN=100", "Comparison\nN=300"),
format = "xx (xx.xx%)",
rrow("A", c(104, .2), c(100, .4)),
rrow("B", c(23, .4), c(43, .5)),
rrow(),
rrow("this is a very long section header"),
rrow("estimate", rcell(55.23, "xx.xx", colspan = 2)),
rrow("95% CI", indent = 1, rcell(c(44.8, 67.4), format = "(xx.x, xx.x)", colspan = 2))
)Before we go into explaining the individual components used to create this table we continue with the html conversion of the rtable object:
as_html(tbl, width = "80%")| Treatement | Comparison | |
|---|---|---|
| N=100 | N=300 | |
| A | 104 (20%) | 100 (40%) |
| B | 23 (40%) | 43 (50%) |
| this is a very long section header | ||
| estimate | 55.23 | |
Next, the [ operator lets you access the cell content.
tbl[1, 1] Treatement
N=100
--------------
A 104 (20%)
and to format that cell run format_rcell(tbl[1,1])=.
Note that tbl[6, 1] and tbl[6, 2] display both the same rcell because of the colspan.