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# knitr with latex forloop

Sorry if this is a stupid question, but does anyone know how to loop over R functions in knitr? My problem thus far is passing the variable from latex to the R function. I am trying to do something like this:

\documentclass{article}
\usepackage{forloop}
\newcounter{ind}
\begin{document}

%Simple R function:
<<simpleRFun, results='asis' ,echo=FALSE>>=
simpleRFun = function(ind){
set.seed(ind) ;
plot(runif(100)) ;
}
@

%Run the function for value of 1
<<>>=
simpleRFun(1)
@

%Run the function for value of 2
<<>>=
simpleRFun(2)
@

%Loop over values of 1 and 2:
\forloop{ind}{1}{\value{ind} < 3}{
\arabic{ind}
}

%Loop over values of 1 and 2 and pass to R function:
%Everything runs fine until this line:
\forloop{ind}{1}{\value{ind} < 3}{
<<>>=
simpleRFun(ind)
@
}

\end{document}


I am getting the following error:

Runaway argument?
#### Error: object 'ind' not found \end {verbatim} \end {kframe} \end \ETC.
./knitr-minimal.tex:97: Paragraph ended before \@xverbatim was complete.
\par
l.97 }


Thanks in advance for the help.

-
why do you use results='asis' for the first chunk? that does not make sense because that chunk does not have any text output; what is more, you have also hidden the R source by echo=FALSE, so basically nothing will be written into tex – Yihui Jul 4 '12 at 1:31
if all else fails, you can probably do it with brew, and output a knit-able file. – baptiste Jul 4 '12 at 5:58

I don't think that you can do what you are trying to do (at least not in the way that you are trying to do it). The knitr function runs all the R code without doing anything with the LaTeX code, then you use LaTeX on the results and it does not run R for the R part.

Can you redo your loop to do the looping in R so that knitr puts the results of the loop into the LaTeX?

Either that or you need an extension to LaTeX that will run the R part for you.

-
Greg, thanks for the feedback. But I am pretty sure that it will work this way, and there are advantages if it does- namely that I can insert latex at very level of the loop. The code %Everything runs fine until this line: \forloop{ind}{1}{\value{ind} < 3}{ <<>>= simpleRFun(1) @ } runs the R code fine (twice), just for the same variable (here, for a value of 1). I just need to get the variable from the loop to pass to the R. I believe that the problem is my lack of understanding on my part of how to pass environment variables in latex. Thanks again. – Jim Crozier Jul 3 '12 at 20:28
Are you really sure that R runs that section twice? Do you have a variable called ind in your R workspace? (if so remove it and try again, you might get an error instead). What I think is happening above is that knitr runs SimpleRfun(ind) once in R ignoring the LaTeX for loop and using the local to R copy of ind, then LaTeX takes that output and includes it twice. knitr ignores (and passes on) all the LaTeX code (including the loop) and just replaces the R code with its outpu, then LaTeX processes the file with only output, no code remaining. – Greg Snow Jul 3 '12 at 20:42
Ahh, I believe that you are right. I just added 'ind' to the graph (main= ind) and it is, as you say, just replicating the graph twice. Do you know, instead, of any way of adding direct latex to the loop inside my R chunk? I need the latex to update at every interval of the loop. Thanks. – Jim Crozier Jul 3 '12 at 20:51
I do not quite understand what you really want to do here; if you want to produce two plots in a loop, why not for (i in 1:2) simpleRFun(i)? If you want to write native TeX output from R chunks, you can use chunk option results='asis' combined with some cat() statements in R code. – Yihui Jul 4 '12 at 1:34
@JimCrozier The paste function just combines strings together but does not print them (but if you don't assign the results then print is called on the results). The print function is used to "pretty print" or format output and sometimes only shows a subset of the object being "printed" and can add additional information. The cat function pastes its arguments together then dumps them as is to the screen or file (the name cat comes from the common misuse of the unix cat command that was originally short for concatenate). – Greg Snow Jul 4 '12 at 17:11