It is very true, the #rstats package #pkgdown is really very easy to use ! Only two lines of code and my package has a website! Thank you developers! https://pkgdown.r-lib.org/

It is very true, the #rstats package #pkgdown is really very easy to use ! Only two lines of code and my package has a website! Thank you developers! https://pkgdown.r-lib.org/
How gglobalclocks home page is looking. https://github.com/EvaMaeRey/gglobalclocks Arg! What's going on here? #pkgdown adventures.
@beps I truly understand what you mean. I am now talking a little about #RKWard. We have a solid integration of #git, #rio and some other tools. #quarto works. A tight integration of #styler would be nice. We have a good R console and a terminal. Likewise, we don't have the deep integration of #devtools, #roxygen2 and #pkgdown. Some find it good (I) others find it a hindrance.
In the end, there are many good choices.
Hey, a new version 2.0.0. of my 𝗯𝘀𝘃𝗮𝗿𝘀 package has lots of new options, such as functions for predictive and structural analyses. But it also comes with a new 𝗽𝗸𝗴𝗱𝗼𝘄𝗻 website!
Academics opting to write statistical software documentation in pdfs only rather than html/markdown is holding back the adoption of social scientific methods for #DataScience
For #Rstats, use #pkgdown: https://pkgdown.r-lib.org/
For #PyData, use #sphinx / #readthedocs : https://sphinx-book-theme.readthedocs.io/en/stable/
New blog post: "Share your #RStats work following good dev practices from a single #Notebook" Discover `fusen::init_share_on_github()`: From #notebook to #pkgdown website in one command
https://statnmap.com/2022-10-28-share-your-r-work-following-good-dev-practices-from-a-single-notebook/
@Russpoldrack I usually have a repo per project anyway, so I'm now using quarto for project websites (using github pages), and then I use quarto/revealjs to add a slide deck as a link on the project website.
Basically the same approach as what @matti and I wrote here with {vertical}, but using #QuartoPub instead of #pkgdown. This is all R-centric, but doesn't need to be.
https://link.springer.com/article/10.3758/s13428-020-01436-x