The question is old, but still receives a lot of attention. As the existing answers are outdated, here a more up-to-date solution:
Resizing local images
As of knitr
1.12, there is the function include_graphics
. From ?include_graphics
(emphasis mine):
The major advantage of using this function is that it is portable in the sense that it works for all document formats that knitr
supports, so you do not need to think if you have to use, for example, LaTeX or Markdown syntax, to embed an external image. Chunk options related to graphics output that work for normal R plots also work for these images, such as out.width
and out.height
.
Example:
```{r, out.width = "400px"}
knitr::include_graphics("path/to/image.png")
```
Advantages:
- Over agastudy's answer: No need for external libraries or for re-rastering the image.
- Over Shruti Kapoor's answer: No need to manually write HTML. Besides, the image is included in the self-contained version of the file.
Including generated images
To compose the path to a plot that is generated in a chunk (but not included), the chunk options opts_current$get("fig.path")
(path to figure directory) as well as opts_current$get("label")
(label of current chunk) may be useful. The following example uses fig.path
to include the second of two images which were generated (but not displayed) in the first chunk:
```{r generate_figures, fig.show = "hide"}
library(knitr)
plot(1:10, col = "green")
plot(1:10, col = "red")
```
```{r}
include_graphics(sprintf("%sgenerate_figures-2.png", opts_current$get("fig.path")))
```
The general pattern of figure paths is [fig.path]/[chunklabel]-[i].[ext]
, where chunklabel
is the label of the chunk where the plot has been generated, i
is the plot index (within this chunk) and ext
is the file extension (by default png
in RMarkdown documents).