R Weekly 2020-23 {officedown}, {dplyr} 1.0.0 available, Outstanding User Interfaces
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Hello and welcome to this new issue!
Release Date: 2020-06-08
This week’s release was curated by Eric Nantz, with help from the RWeekly team members and contributors.
Black Lives Matter Support
Highlight
{officedown} 0.1.0: Enhanced ‘R Markdown’ Format for ‘Word’ and ‘PowerPoint’
Insights
R in the Real World
R in Organizations
R in Academia
Resources
New Packages
???? Go Live for More New Pkgs ????
CRAN
{rmdpartials} 0.5.8: Partial ‘rmarkdown’ Documents to Prettify your Reports
{ggnuplot} 0.1.0: Make ‘ggplot2’ Look Like ‘gnuplot’
{ggtext} 0.1.0: Improved Text Rendering Support for ‘ggplot2’
{word2vec} 0.1.0: Distributed Representations of Words
{dash} 0.5.0: An Interface to the ‘dash’ Ecosystem for Authoring Reactive Web Applications
{officedown} 0.1.0: Enhanced ‘R Markdown’ Format for ‘Word’ and ‘PowerPoint’
{shinySearchbar} 1.0.0: Shiny Searchbar - An Input Widget for Highlighting Text and More
{sketcher} 0.1.3: Pencil Sketch Effect
{newscatcheR} 0.0.2: Programmatically Collect Normalized News from (Almost) Any Website
{MrSGUIDE} 0.1.1: Multiple Responses Subgroup Identification using ‘GUIDE’ Algorithm
{nhlapi} 0.1.2: A Minimum-Dependency ‘R’ Interface to the ‘NHL’ API
{upsetjs} 1.0.2: ‘HTMLWidget’ Wrapper of ‘UpSet.s’ for Exploring Large Set Intersections
GitHub or Bitbucket
tidybayes.rethinking: Extend tidybayes to work with the rethinking package
instaloadeR: R Wrapper for instaloader Python module to scrape instragram data
Updated Packages
Videos and Podcasts
Tutorials
R Project Updates
Updates from R Core:
Upcoming Events in 3 Months
Events in 3 Months:
Call for Participation
Quotes of the Week
And let it be known that, on this day of the 7th of June 2020 (aka The End Times), our brave #rstats hero finally smote the eldritch terror known as rJava.
— Max Kuhn (@topepos) June 7, 2020
Let it slumber for all eternity (or until his next OS upgrade). pic.twitter.com/yF7rjoHxbA
To those who suggest that tech folks should "stick to tech" and avoid politics: Open source is political, it's deeply intertwined with societal systems of power. It's also an opportunity to balance some of that power. Politics is why many get into open source in the first place
— Chris Holdgraf (@choldgraf) June 3, 2020
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