Split the HTML output into chapters while updating relative links (e.g. links
in TOC, footnotes, citations, figure/table cross-references, and so on).
Functions html_book() and tufte_html_book() are simple wrapper
functions of html_chapter() using a specific base output format.
html_chapters(
toc = TRUE,
number_sections = TRUE,
fig_caption = TRUE,
lib_dir = "libs",
template = bookdown_file("templates/default.html"),
global_numbering = !number_sections,
pandoc_args = NULL,
...,
base_format = rmarkdown::html_document,
split_bib = TRUE,
page_builder = build_chapter,
split_by = c("chapter", "section", "0", "1", "2", "3", "4", "5", "6", "chapter+number",
"section+number", "0+number", "1+number", "2+number", "3+number", "4+number",
"5+number", "6+number", "rmd", "none")
)html_book(...)
tufte_html_book(...)
An R Markdown output format object to be passed to
bookdown::render_book().
See
rmarkdown::html_document,
tufte::tufte_html, or the documentation
of the base_format function.
If TRUE, number figures and tables globally
throughout a document (e.g., Figure 1, Figure 2, ...). If FALSE,
number them sequentially within sections (e.g., Figure 1.1, Figure 1.2,
..., Figure 5.1, Figure 5.2, ...). Note that global_numbering =
FALSE will not work with number_sections = FALSE because sections
are not numbered.
Other arguments to be passed to base_format. For
html_book() and tufte_html_book(), ... is passed to
html_chapters().
An output format function to be used as the base format.
Whether to split the bibliography onto separate pages where the citations are actually used.
A function to combine different parts of a chapter into a
page (an HTML character vector). See build_chapter for the
specification of this function.
How to name the HTML output files from the book: rmd
uses the base filenames of the input Rmd files to create the HTML
filenames, e.g. generate chapter1.html for chapter1.Rmd;
none or "0" means do not split the HTML file (the book will be
a single HTML file); chapter or "1" means split the file by
the first-level headers; section or "2" means the second-level
headers, "3"-"6" means split the file by the [3-6]-level
headers. For chapter, section and "1"-"6", the
HTML filenames will be determined by the header ID's, e.g. the filename
for the first chapter with a chapter title # Introduction will be
introduction.html; for "chapter+number", "section+number"
and "[1-6]+number" the chapter/section (and higher level section)
numbers will be prepended to the HTML filenames, e.g.
1-introduction.html and 2-1-literature.html.