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This is not a programming question per se, but seeing as how R and ggplot2 are popular here I thought I'd ask if anyone knows if there is a way to download all of the documentation for ggplot2 at http://docs.ggplot2.org so that they can be accessed offline. I am frequently in a situation where internet access is not available.

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    I heard of an alternate technology where they take the accumulated knowledge and compress it into a thing they call a "book". I don't know if that really has a future, but you could this one here Feb 24, 2013 at 19:14
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    You could try rendering your own version using staticdocs as it appears was done to generate the web pages to which you are referring Feb 24, 2013 at 19:18
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    @Dirk Eddelbuettel I'm afraid the ggplot2 book is really quite out of date. It's still good for discussion of the concepts and basic workings, but so much has changed, the online documentation and the book are in no way interchangeable
    – alexwhan
    Feb 24, 2013 at 19:41
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    Just out of interest, what is it you're after that's not available from the R-command line > ?ggplot_[specific_command] or the pdf manual available at CRAN? Feb 24, 2013 at 20:20
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    The text of the ggplot2 web site is the same as the help files (in fact its automatically generated from the help files using the staticdocs package) so the only real advantage to this is that you get the images too. If the text is sufficient then you don't need the site. Anyways, I just tried generating the local docs using staticdocs but got a huge number of errors and it finally stopped before completion so wget or other site downloader is probably your best bet. Feb 24, 2013 at 20:39

4 Answers 4

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What about the R Graphics Cookbook by Winston Chang?

Edit: Or using wget, as Ben Bolker suggests:

 wget --recursive --no-clobber --page-requisites --html-extension --convert-links   --restrict-file-names=windows --domains=docs.ggplot2.org  http://docs.ggplot2.org/current/

The --domains option should prevent to follow links outside of http://docs.ggplot2.org (like those at the bottom of the page). However I did not test that.

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  • It appears to be the --domain option that is causing troubles for me. wget -r -L http://docs.ggplot2.org/current/index.html works well for me though.
    – Dason
    Feb 24, 2013 at 21:14
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The page itself is created using Hadley's staticdocs package. You can run staticdocs on ggplot2 yourself to create the pages. You'll need the highlight package to install staticdocs. You can get that here or I hosted it on github for my convenience and you could get it with devtools with the commands

library(devtools)
install_github("highlight", "Dasonk")

to install staticdocs you can use devtools as well

install_github("staticdocs")

To run staticdocs you'll need the ggplot2 code and it's easiest to grab that with git. Assuming you're in a directory that you want the ggplot2 folder to be downloaded into you can use the following (assuming you have git installed).

git clone https://github.com/hadley/ggplot2.git

Alternatively you could grab the package source from the CRAN page and unpack that.

Make sure you have the suggested packages for ggplot2 (if you don't then staticdocs will exit abruptly once it hits an example it can't run because you don't have the suggested packages installed). If you're not sure if you have all the suggested packages it's easiest to just install ggplot2 using the dependencies=TRUE paramter.

install.packages("ggplot2", dependencies = TRUE)

then you can run staticdocs using the following:

library(staticdocs)
setwd("path/to/ggplot2/folder")
build_package(".", "inst/staticdocs")

Then you can find all the files you need in the inst/staticdocs subfolder and opening index.html will let you browse locally.

Note that using wget or some other method is probably a lot faster and lot easier once you get it to run. staticdocs takes quite a bit of time to run through completion and I didn't browse all the pages to make sure everything turned out alright. Another disadvantage of this method is that this runs based off the current developmental state of the package and so it might be a little ahead of what you actually have installed on your system.

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My response isn't R specific.

When you do have internet, you could manually opens each page and save them. For example, if you have Google Chrome (I am sure other browsers have their list of extensions), you can install either Awesome Screenshot: Capture & Annotate or Screen Capture (by Google) from the Chrome Web Store, then choose to capture entire page. There are also extension that lets you save the page as PDF file.

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Another approach is to use the knit_rd() function in the knitr package. This takes the HTML version of the help pages, pulls out the examples, and runs them capturing the output (text or graphical) as knitr does. This will give you a directory of HTML files (and graphics) that can be viewed without a connection to the internet. It doesn't look exactly like the website created via staticdocs, but it has the same information, including worked examples and the graphical output of those examples.

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