format inline Sexpr number to include a comma
I have the following inline code to call a value from R code. The value called for example is 8000. I would like to format the value so there is a comma for the 1,000 place - for example 8,000.
The inline code is:
$text{Sexpr{table1.1[4,3]}}$
I am using R Studio and pdfLaTex.
punctuation knitr
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I have the following inline code to call a value from R code. The value called for example is 8000. I would like to format the value so there is a comma for the 1,000 place - for example 8,000.
The inline code is:
$text{Sexpr{table1.1[4,3]}}$
I am using R Studio and pdfLaTex.
punctuation knitr
add a comment |
I have the following inline code to call a value from R code. The value called for example is 8000. I would like to format the value so there is a comma for the 1,000 place - for example 8,000.
The inline code is:
$text{Sexpr{table1.1[4,3]}}$
I am using R Studio and pdfLaTex.
punctuation knitr
I have the following inline code to call a value from R code. The value called for example is 8000. I would like to format the value so there is a comma for the 1,000 place - for example 8,000.
The inline code is:
$text{Sexpr{table1.1[4,3]}}$
I am using R Studio and pdfLaTex.
punctuation knitr
punctuation knitr
asked Mar 6 at 18:24
user41509user41509
1303
1303
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1 Answer
1
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You can use either the numprint
package or the siunitx
package in combination with Sexpr
. Using text
is not necessary. MWE:
documentclass{article}
usepackage{numprint}
npthousandsep{,}
usepackage{siunitx}
sisetup{group-separator = {,}, group-minimum-digits = 4}
begin{document}
<<echo=FALSE>>=
a <- 8000
@
$a_1=numprint{Sexpr{a}}$ % using numprint
$a_2=num{Sexpr{a}}$ % using siunitx
end{document}
Result:
Of course when you use numprint
you can delete the two lines about siunitx
and vice versa. In general numprint
is a bit easier to use but siunitx
has (a lot) more features.
See also: Format long numbers with a thousand separator?, Preserving thousands separator with siunitx.
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
You can use either the numprint
package or the siunitx
package in combination with Sexpr
. Using text
is not necessary. MWE:
documentclass{article}
usepackage{numprint}
npthousandsep{,}
usepackage{siunitx}
sisetup{group-separator = {,}, group-minimum-digits = 4}
begin{document}
<<echo=FALSE>>=
a <- 8000
@
$a_1=numprint{Sexpr{a}}$ % using numprint
$a_2=num{Sexpr{a}}$ % using siunitx
end{document}
Result:
Of course when you use numprint
you can delete the two lines about siunitx
and vice versa. In general numprint
is a bit easier to use but siunitx
has (a lot) more features.
See also: Format long numbers with a thousand separator?, Preserving thousands separator with siunitx.
add a comment |
You can use either the numprint
package or the siunitx
package in combination with Sexpr
. Using text
is not necessary. MWE:
documentclass{article}
usepackage{numprint}
npthousandsep{,}
usepackage{siunitx}
sisetup{group-separator = {,}, group-minimum-digits = 4}
begin{document}
<<echo=FALSE>>=
a <- 8000
@
$a_1=numprint{Sexpr{a}}$ % using numprint
$a_2=num{Sexpr{a}}$ % using siunitx
end{document}
Result:
Of course when you use numprint
you can delete the two lines about siunitx
and vice versa. In general numprint
is a bit easier to use but siunitx
has (a lot) more features.
See also: Format long numbers with a thousand separator?, Preserving thousands separator with siunitx.
add a comment |
You can use either the numprint
package or the siunitx
package in combination with Sexpr
. Using text
is not necessary. MWE:
documentclass{article}
usepackage{numprint}
npthousandsep{,}
usepackage{siunitx}
sisetup{group-separator = {,}, group-minimum-digits = 4}
begin{document}
<<echo=FALSE>>=
a <- 8000
@
$a_1=numprint{Sexpr{a}}$ % using numprint
$a_2=num{Sexpr{a}}$ % using siunitx
end{document}
Result:
Of course when you use numprint
you can delete the two lines about siunitx
and vice versa. In general numprint
is a bit easier to use but siunitx
has (a lot) more features.
See also: Format long numbers with a thousand separator?, Preserving thousands separator with siunitx.
You can use either the numprint
package or the siunitx
package in combination with Sexpr
. Using text
is not necessary. MWE:
documentclass{article}
usepackage{numprint}
npthousandsep{,}
usepackage{siunitx}
sisetup{group-separator = {,}, group-minimum-digits = 4}
begin{document}
<<echo=FALSE>>=
a <- 8000
@
$a_1=numprint{Sexpr{a}}$ % using numprint
$a_2=num{Sexpr{a}}$ % using siunitx
end{document}
Result:
Of course when you use numprint
you can delete the two lines about siunitx
and vice versa. In general numprint
is a bit easier to use but siunitx
has (a lot) more features.
See also: Format long numbers with a thousand separator?, Preserving thousands separator with siunitx.
answered Mar 6 at 22:46
MarijnMarijn
8,069636
8,069636
add a comment |
add a comment |
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