xtableList creates an object from a list of tables, which can
  be used by print.xtableList to produce a composite table
  containing the information from the individual tables.
xtableList(x, caption = NULL, label = NULL,
           align = NULL, digits = NULL, display = NULL, ...)# S3 method for xtableList
print(x,
  type = getOption("xtable.type", "latex"),
  file = getOption("xtable.file", ""),
  append = getOption("xtable.append", FALSE),
  floating = getOption("xtable.floating", TRUE),
  floating.environment = getOption("xtable.floating.environment", "table"),
  table.placement = getOption("xtable.table.placement", "ht"),
  caption.placement = getOption("xtable.caption.placement", "bottom"),
  caption.width = getOption("xtable.caption.width", NULL),
  latex.environments = getOption("xtable.latex.environments", c("center")),
  tabular.environment = getOption("xtable.tabular.environment", "tabular"),
  size = getOption("xtable.size", NULL),
  hline.after = NULL,
  NA.string = getOption("xtable.NA.string", ""),
  include.rownames = getOption("xtable.include.rownames", TRUE),
  colnames.format = "single",
  only.contents = getOption("xtable.only.contents", FALSE),
  add.to.row = NULL,
  sanitize.text.function = getOption("xtable.sanitize.text.function", NULL),
  sanitize.rownames.function = getOption("xtable.sanitize.rownames.function",
                                         sanitize.text.function),
  sanitize.colnames.function = getOption("xtable.sanitize.colnames.function",
                                         sanitize.text.function),
  sanitize.subheadings.function =
    getOption("xtable.sanitize.subheadings.function",
              sanitize.text.function),
  sanitize.message.function =
    getOption("xtable.sanitize.message.function",
              sanitize.text.function),
  math.style.negative = getOption("xtable.math.style.negative", FALSE),
  math.style.exponents = getOption("xtable.math.style.exponents", FALSE),
  html.table.attributes = getOption("xtable.html.table.attributes", "border=1"),
  print.results = getOption("xtable.print.results", TRUE),
  format.args = getOption("xtable.format.args", NULL),
  rotate.rownames = getOption("xtable.rotate.rownames", FALSE),
  rotate.colnames = getOption("xtable.rotate.colnames", FALSE),
  booktabs = getOption("xtable.booktabs", FALSE),
  scalebox = getOption("xtable.scalebox", NULL),
  width = getOption("xtable.width", NULL),
  comment = getOption("xtable.comment", TRUE),
  timestamp = getOption("xtable.timestamp", date()),
  ...)
For xtableList, a list of R objects all of the same class,
    being a class found among methods(xtable). The list may also
    have attributes "subheadings" and "message". The
    attribute "subheadings" should be a character vector of the
    same length as the list x. The attribute "message"
    should be a character vector of any length.
    For print.xtableList, an object of class xtableList
    produced by a call to xtableList.
Character vector of length 1 or 2 containing the
    table's caption or title.  If length is 2, the second item is the
    "short caption" used when LaTeX generates a "List of Tables". Set to
    NULL to suppress the caption.  Default value is NULL.
Character vector of length 1 containing the LaTeX label
    or HTML anchor. Set to NULL to suppress the label.  Default
    value is NULL.
Character vector of length equal to the number of columns
    of the resulting table, indicating the alignment of the corresponding
    columns.  Also, "|" may be used to produce vertical lines
    between columns in LaTeX tables, but these are effectively ignored
    when considering the required length of the supplied vector.  If a
    character vector of length one is supplied, it is split as
    strsplit(align, "")[[1]] before processing. Since the row
    names are printed in the first column, the length of align is
    one greater than ncol(x) if x is a
    data.frame. Use "l", "r", and "c" to
    denote left, right, and center alignment, respectively.  Use
    "p{3cm}" etc. for a LaTeX column of the specified width. For
    HTML output the "p" alignment is interpreted as "l",
    ignoring the width request. Default depends on the class of
    x.
Either NULL, or a vector of length one, or a vector of length
    equal to the number of columns in the resulting table, indicating
    the number of digits to display in the corresponding columns, or a
    list if length equal to the number of R objects making up x,
    all members being vectors of the same length, either length one or
    of length equal to the number of columns in the resulting table. See
    details for further information.
Either NULL, or a vector of length one, or a vector of length
    equal to the number of columns in the resulting table, indicating
    the format of the corresponding columns, or a
    list if length equal to the number of R objects making up x,
    all members being vectors of the same length, either length one or
    of length equal to the number of columns in the resulting table. See
    details for further information.
Type of table to produce. Possible values for type
    are "latex" or "html".
    Default value is "latex".
Name of file where the resulting code should be saved.  If
    file="", output is displayed on screen.  Note that the
    function also (invisibly) returns a character vector of the results
    (which can be helpful for post-processing).
    Default value is "".
If TRUE and file!="", code will be
    appended to file instead of overwriting file.
    Default value is FALSE.
If TRUE and type="latex", the resulting
    table will be a floating table (using, for example,
    \begin{table} and \end{table}).  See
    floating.environment below.
    Default value is TRUE.
If floating=TRUE and
    type="latex", the resulting table uses the specified floating
    environment. Possible values include "table", "table*",
    and other floating environments defined in LaTeX packages.
    Default value is "table".
If floating=TRUE and
    type="latex", the floating table will have placement given by
    table.placement where table.placement must be
    NULL or contain only elements of
    {"h","t","b","p","!","H"}.
    Default value is "ht".
The caption will be placed at the bottom
    of the table if caption.placement is "bottom" and at
    the top of the table if it equals "top".
    Default value is "bottom".
The caption will be placed in a "parbox"
    of the specified width if caption.width is not NULL and
	type="latex". Default value is NULL.
If floating=TRUE and
    type="latex", the specified LaTeX environments (provided as
    a character vector) will enclose the tabular environment.
    Default value is "center".
When type="latex", the tabular
    environment that will be used.
    When working with tables that extend more than one page, using
    tabular.environment="longtable" with the corresponding
    LaTeX package (see Fairbairns, 2005) allows one to typeset them
    uniformly. Note that floating should be set to
    FALSE when using the longtable environment.
    Default value is "tabular".
A character vector that is inserted just before the
    tabular environment starts. This can be used to set the font size
    and a variety of other table settings. Initial backslashes are
    automatically prefixed, if not supplied by user.
    Default value is NULL.
When type="latex", a vector of numbers
    between -1 and the number of rows in the resulting table, inclusive,
    indicating the rows after which a horizontal line should
    appear. Determining row numbers is not straightforward since some
    lines in the resulting table don't enter into the count.  The
    default depends on the value of col.names.format.
String to be used for missing values in table
    entries.
    Default value is "".
If TRUE the rows names are
    printed.
    Default value is TRUE.
Either "single" or "multiple".
    Default is "single".
If TRUE only the rows of the
    table are printed.
    Default value is FALSE.
A list of two components. The first component (which
    should be called 'pos') is a list that contains the position of rows on
    which extra commands should be added at the end. The second
    component (which should be called 'command') is a character vector
    of the same length as the first component, which contains the command
    that should be added at the end of the specified rows.
    Default value is NULL, i.e. do not add commands.
All non-numeric entries (except row and
    column names) are sanitized in an attempt to remove characters which
    have special meaning for the output format. If
    sanitize.text.function is not NULL, it should
    be a function taking a character vector and returning one, and will
    be used for the sanitization instead of the default internal
    function.
    Default value is NULL.
Like the
    sanitize.text.function, but applicable to row names.
    The default uses the sanitize.text.function.
Like the
    sanitize.text.function, but applicable to column names.
    The default uses the sanitize.text.function.
Like the
    sanitize.text.function, but applicable to subheadings.
    The default uses the sanitize.text.function.
Like the
    sanitize.text.function, but applicable to the message.
    The default uses the sanitize.text.function.
In a LaTeX table, if TRUE, then use
    $-$ for the negative sign (as was the behavior prior to version 1.5-3).
    Default value is FALSE.
In a LaTeX table, if TRUE or
    "$$", then use $5 \times 10^{5}$ for 5e5. If
    "ensuremath", then use \ensuremath{5 \times 10^{5}}
    for 5e5. If "UTF-8" or "UTF-8", then use UTF-8 to
    approximate the LaTeX typsetting for 5e5.
    Default value is FALSE.
In an HTML table, attributes associated
    with the <TABLE> tag.
    Default value is "border=1".
If TRUE, the generated table is printed to
    standard output.  Set this to FALSE if you will just be using
    the character vector that is returned invisibly.
  Default value is TRUE.
List of arguments for the formatC function.
    For example, standard German number separators can be specified as
    format.args=list(big.mark = "'", decimal.mark =
      ",")). The arguments digits and format should not be
    included in this list. See details.
    Default value is NULL.
If TRUE, the row names are displayed
    vertically in LaTeX.
    Default value is FALSE.
If TRUE, the column names are displayed
    vertically in LaTeX.
    Default value is FALSE.
If TRUE, the toprule, midrule and
    bottomrule commands from the LaTeX "booktabs" package are used
    rather than hline for the horizontal line tags.
If not NULL, a scalebox clause will be
    added around the tabular environment with the specified value used
    as the scaling factor.
    Default value is NULL.
If not NULL, the specified value is included in
    parentheses between the tabular environment begin tag and the
    alignment specification.  This allows specification of the table
    width when using tabular environments such as tabular* and
    tabularx.  Note that table width specification is not
    supported with the tabular or longtable environments.
    Default value is NULL.
If TRUE, the version and timestamp comment is
    included.  Default value is TRUE.
Timestamp to include in LaTeX comment.  Set this
    to NULL to exclude the timestamp. Default value is
    date().
Additional arguments. (Currently ignored.)
xtableList produces an object of class
  "xtableList". An object of this class is a list of
  "xtable" objects with some additional attributes. Each element
  of the list can have a "subheading" attribute. The list can
  also have a "message" attribute.
print.xtableList produces a character string containing LaTeX
  markup which produces a composite table in a LaTeX document.
xtableList produces an object suitable for printing using
  print.xtableList.
The elements of the list x supplied to xtableList must
  all have the same structure. When these list items are submitted to
  xtable the resulting table must have the same number of columns
  with the same column names and type of data.
The values supplied to arguments digits and display,
  must be composed of elements as specified in those same arguments for
  the function xtable. See the help for
  xtable for details.
print.xtableList produces tables in two different formats
  depending on the value of col.names.format. If
  col.names.format = "single", the resulting table has only a
  single heading row. If col.names.format = "multiple" there is a
  heading row for each of the subtables making up the complete table.
By default if col.names.format = "single", there are horizontal
  lines above and below the heading row, and at the end of each
  subtable. If col.names.format = "multiple", there are
  horizontal lines above and below each appearance of the heading row,
  and at the end of each subtable.
If "subheadings" is not NULL, the individual elements of
  this vector (which can include newlines \n) produce a heading
  line or lines for the subtables. When col.names.format =
    "multiple" these subheadings appear above the heading rows.
If "message" is not NULL the vector produces a line or
  lines at the end of the table.
Consult the vignette ‘The xtableList Gallery’ to see
  the behaviour of these functions.
Note that at present there is no code for type = "html".
# NOT RUN {
data(mtcars)
mtcars <- mtcars[, 1:6]
mtcarsList <- split(mtcars, f = mtcars$cyl)
attr(mtcarsList, "subheadings") <- paste0("Number of cylinders = ",
                                          names(mtcarsList))
attr(mtcarsList, "message") <- c("Line 1 of Message",
                                 "Line 2 of Message")
xList <- xtableList(mtcarsList)
print.xtableList(xList)
print.xtableList(xList, colnames.format = "multiple")
# }
Run the code above in your browser using DataLab