# Basic R - Outputting basic R correlation table -> LaTex or text

I am generating a correlation table with http://myowelt.blogspot.com/2008/04/beautiful-correlation-tables-in-r.html

I am not successful, however, in outputting the file to a usable LaTex file or text file. I have been unsuccessful using sink() to save the data to a text file.

Suppose I am using the following command:

corstarsl(lpp_axis1)


How would I pipe the output to a text file? I've read the documentation on sink and I'm missing a step somewhere. (I open the connection, execute the command, unlink the file and then I find nothing.)

I've also tried using the output from xtable(cortstarsl(lpp_axis1)) in a tex file yet I receive a "element table not found error. I do not know enough about Tex to track the source of the problem.

Suggestions for outputting this data? Other suggestions for creating a correlation table?

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Usually "unlinking a file" means deleting it. Are you sure that is what you are doing? –  Sharpie Feb 21 '11 at 19:31
Perhaps you meant "closing the connection"? Anyway... you should try to coerce an object to table class. –  aL3xa Feb 21 '11 at 20:36
Does default sweave help here? –  Matt Bannert Feb 22 '11 at 7:58

Using the code from the web page you link to, I get (with the built in airquality data):

> require(Hmisc)
> require(xtable)
> xtable(corstarsl(airquality))
% latex table generated in R 2.12.1 by xtable 1.5-6 package
% Mon Feb 21 20:00:34 2011
\begin{table}[ht]
\begin{center}
\begin{tabular}{rlllll}
\hline
& ozone & solar.r & wind & temp & month \\
\hline
ozone &  &  &  &  &  \\
solar.r &  0.35*** &  &  &  &  \\
wind & -0.60*** & -0.06  &  &  &  \\
temp &  0.70*** &  0.28*** & -0.46*** &  &  \\
month &  0.16  & -0.08  & -0.18*  &  0.42*** &  \\
day & -0.01  & -0.15  &  0.03  & -0.13  & -0.01  \\
\hline
\end{tabular}
\end{center}
\end{table}


So the question then is how to get this TeX output to a file. Here capture.output() is one friend:

> capture.output(xtable(corstarsl(airquality)), file = "mytable.tex")


Which outputs the code to file named mytable.tex:

$cat mytable.tex % latex table generated in R 2.12.1 by xtable 1.5-6 package % Mon Feb 21 20:01:03 2011 \begin{table}[ht] \begin{center} \begin{tabular}{rlllll} \hline & ozone & solar.r & wind & temp & month \\ \hline ozone & & & & & \\ solar.r & 0.35*** & & & & \\ wind & -0.60*** & -0.06 & & & \\ temp & 0.70*** & 0.28*** & -0.46*** & & \\ month & 0.16 & -0.08 & -0.18* & 0.42*** & \\ day & -0.01 & -0.15 & 0.03 & -0.13 & -0.01 \\ \hline \end{tabular} \ end{center} \end{table}  For "plain" delimited text output, perhaps to dump into a word processor or Spreadsheet, try write.table(), eg: > write.table(corstarsl(airquality), file = "mytable2.txt")  Which results in a file like this: $ cat mytable2.txt
"ozone" "solar.r" "wind" "temp" "month"
"ozone" "" "" "" "" ""
"solar.r" " 0.35***" "" "" "" ""
"wind" "-0.60***" "-0.06 " "" "" ""
"temp" " 0.70***" " 0.28***" "-0.46***" "" ""
"month" " 0.16 " "-0.08 " "-0.18* " " 0.42***" ""
"day" "-0.01 " "-0.15 " " 0.03 " "-0.13 " "-0.01 "


You can alter the quoting and delimiter to your heart's content - see ?write.table.

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Thank you very much. This is very helpful! (I don't normally use exclamation points.) –  Donnied Feb 21 '11 at 20:31
Any thoughts off hand on making a the same table with additional columns for the R^2 values? –  Donnied Feb 21 '11 at 20:48
I'll need to tweak the tex file now so that it is not too wide. –  Donnied Feb 21 '11 at 20:49
@Donnied can you explain what you want; what R2 values - the squared values of the correlations already in the table? Why extra columns, would the upper triangle of the existing matrix suffice? –  Gavin Simpson Feb 22 '11 at 10:20