I will test this out, but I'd like to point out that there is probably
an easier way.
Using LyX configured with Rweave, my students and I have had very good
luck generating documents that incorporate R graphics. Like you
propose, it is a one-file approach. I have example lyx and pdf output
files online in http://pj.freefaculty.org/stat/Distributions and there
is a guide to configure LyX so this works in a seemingly apparent way
on the LyX wiki:
http://wiki.lyx.org/LyX/LyxWithRThroughSweave. We worked out a
Windows scheme to do the same, but I did not document it.
pj
On 6/16/06, Johan Sandblom <jsandblom at gmail.com>
wrote:> In case there are users of the TeX macro package ConTeXt on this list,
> they may be interested to know that it is now possible to include R
> code in a ConTeXt document and have the code evaluated while
> compiling. The inverse of Sweave, as it were. The advantage is that
> there is then only one file to keep track of (.tex vs .rnw and .tex),
> while a drawback is speed, since each code snippet is evaluated in its
> own R session with associated startup time. Below is a small example
> of usage
>
> \usemodule[r]
>
> \starttext
>
> \title{Example usage of R module}
>
> \startRhidden
> rm(list=ls())
> x <- rnorm(100)
> y <- runif(100)
> \stopRhidden
>
> \type{x} and \type{y} are randomly generated.
>
> \startR
> summary(lm(y~x))
> pdf("xy.pdf")
> plot(y~x)
> dev.off()
> \stopR
>
> \placefigure{Y vs X}{\externalfigure[xy][width=.4\textwidth]}
>
> \stoptext
>
> Regards, Johan
>
> --
> Johan Sandblom N8, MRC, Karolinska sjh
> t +46851776108 17176 Stockholm
> m +46735521477 Sweden
> "What is wanted is not the will to believe, but the
> will to find out, which is the exact opposite"
> - Bertrand Russell
>
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--
Paul E. Johnson
Professor, Political Science
1541 Lilac Lane, Room 504
University of Kansas