
Last chance! 50% off unlimited learning
Sale ends in
Create an Alignment object, useful when working with cell styles.
Alignment(horizontal=NULL, vertical=NULL, wrapText=FALSE,
rotation=0, indent=0)is.Alignment(x)
a character value specifying the horizontal
alignment. Valid values come from constant HALIGN_STYLES_
.
a character value specifying the vertical
alignment. Valid values come from constant VALIGN_STYLES_
.
a logical indicating if the text should be wrapped.
a numerical value indicating the degrees you want to rotate the text in the cell.
a numerical value indicating the number of spaces you want to indent the text in the cell.
An Alignment object, as returned by Alignment
.
Alignment
returns a list with components from the input
argument, and a class attribute "Alignment". Alignment objects are
used when constructing cell styles.
is.Alignment
returns TRUE
if the argument is of class
"Alignment" and FALSE
otherwise.
CellStyle
for using the a Alignment
object.
# NOT RUN {
# you can just use h for horizontal, since R does the matching for you
a1 <- Alignment(h="ALIGN_CENTER", rotation=90) # centered and rotated!
# }
Run the code above in your browser using DataLab