Looking at the html generated help pages for a package I'm working on, I noticed a couple of things that looked a little funny. I suspect they are general features of the html for R (I don't usually look at it). First is a problem of vertical alignment in tables. The first column consistently aligned vertically *below* the alignment line of the bottom line of the second column. This was a problem even when both columns were a single line; it was worse when they were multiple lines. In slightly exagerated form, the output looked like this: long discussion of what paramater pp does and its wonderful features pp Likely at least two separate issues: why is it aligning with the last, rather than the first, line of the second column, and why is it below that? It may be relevant that the first column was in \code{a} and the whole thing was in an \arguments{\item{foo}{\tabular{ll} section. Second, the items marked with \code{} appeared fainter than the other text, and were a little hard to read. I'd expect them to be bolder. Perhaps the R.css style sheet could be tweaked for this? R 1.7.1-1 on Debian GNU/Linux Viewed with Mozilla 1.4 Konqueror from KDE 3.1.3 looked very similar, except the typeface for \code was identical to that of the rest. Sample excerpt from the .Rd file: \value{returns a list: \item{singles}{data frame, one row per simulation, with the following columns: \tabular{ll}{ coefficients \tab one column per variable\cr \code{pi1} \tab conditional probability of sampling cases \cr Similar behavior in \arguments section. It is the pi1 above, for example, that is aligned poorly. Alignment of the outer level \item's is better (in fact, the opposite problem, their baseline is above the baseline of the first line of the second column, though their tops are not much higher). -- Ross Boylan wk: (415) 502-4031 530 Parnassus Avenue (Library) rm 115-4 ross at biostat.ucsf.edu Dept of Epidemiology and Biostatistics fax: (415) 476-9856 University of California, San Francisco San Francisco, CA 94143-0840 hm: (415) 550-1062