# Converting R matrix into LaTeX matrix in the math or equation environment

Let's say there is an R matrix x:

x <- structure(c(2, 3, 5, 7, 9, 12, 17, 10, 18, 13), .Dim = c(5L,2L), .Dimnames = list(NULL, c("X1", "X2")))


I am writing a report featuring LaTeX equations, using the Markdown-pandoc-LaTeX workflow. x is one of the matrices that need to appear in these equations. Is it possible to programmatically render the LaTeX respresentation of the matrix as follows?:

\begin{bmatrix}
2 & 12\\
3 & 17\\
5 & 10\\
7 & 18\\
9 & 13
\end{bmatrix}


Ideally the report code would be something in the lines of:

\begin{displaymath}
\mathbf{X} = r whatever-R-code-to-render-X
\end{displaymath}


but this is probably cumbersome, so I will surely settle for the simple transformation.

• P.S. Having asked this, I realized it would probably be not too difficult to write a custom function to do that, but perhaps the functionality already exists? – Maxim.K Dec 23 '13 at 18:51
• Hmisc:::latex what you're looking for? – rawr Dec 23 '13 at 20:16

## 3 Answers

You can use the xtable packages print.xtable method with a simple wrapper script to set some default args.

bmatrix = function(x, digits=NULL, ...) {
library(xtable)
default_args = list(include.colnames=FALSE, only.contents=TRUE,
include.rownames=FALSE, hline.after=NULL, comment=FALSE,
print.results=FALSE)
passed_args = list(...)
calling_args = c(list(x=xtable(x, digits=digits)),
c(passed_args,
default_args[setdiff(names(default_args), names(passed_args))]))
cat("\\begin{bmatrix}\n",
do.call(print.xtable, calling_args),
"\\end{bmatrix}\n")
}


Seems to do what you are looking for

x <- structure(c(2, 3, 5, 7, 9, 12, 17, 10, 18, 13), .Dim = c(5L,2L), .Dimnames = list(NULL, c("X1", "X2")))

bmatrix(x)
## \begin{bmatrix}
##   2.00 & 12.00 \\
##   3.00 & 17.00 \\
##   5.00 & 10.00 \\
##   7.00 & 18.00 \\
##   9.00 & 13.00 \\
##    \end{bmatrix}


And to use no decimal places like your example.

bmatrix(x, digits=0)
## \begin{bmatrix}
##   2 & 12 \\
##   3 & 17 \\
##   5 & 10 \\
##   7 & 18 \\
##   9 & 13 \\
##    \end{bmatrix}

• That is it. Thank you. – Maxim.K Dec 23 '13 at 22:18

For a future reference, here is the function that I wrote myself later:

matrix2latex <- function(matr) {

printmrow <- function(x) {

cat(cat(x,sep=" & "),"\\\\ \n")
}

cat("\\begin{bmatrix}","\n")
body <- apply(matr,1,printmrow)
cat("\\end{bmatrix}")
}


It doesn't require an external package. For some reason the apply produced NULL at the end of the output (the actual return?). This was solved by assigning the return to the body variable, which is otherwise of no use. The next task is to render the output of that function in LaTeX within knitr.

if anyone needs rounded matrices with borders via \bordermatrix, I appended @Maxim.K's function to that end.

m2l <- function(matr) {
matr <- round(x = matr, digits = 2)  # sadly this is necessary because given this function, the options(digits = 2) does not work
matr2 <- data.frame(c("~",rownames(matr)))  # add rownames
for (r in colnames(matr)) {  # add col contents and colnames
matr2 <- cbind(matr2, c(r, matr[,r]))
}
printmrow <- function(x) {
ret <- paste(paste(x, collapse = " & "), "\\cr")
sprintf(ret)
}
out <- apply(matr2, 1, printmrow)
out2 <- paste("\\bordermatrix{", paste(out, collapse = ' '),"}")
return(out2)
}


Pretty hideous code, I know, but get's the job done.

Maybe this'll be useful for someone out there.

Can look nice, especially for correlation matrices and such stuff:

• unfortunately, for some reason, the output works only when render()ing the *.Rmd to PDF (via LaTeX), not to HMTL (via Markdown). Not sure why, raised it here: stackoverflow.com/questions/30740613/… – maxheld Jun 9 '15 at 19:06