A series of worksheets for basic statistical testing with Jamovi. The HTML versions can be live previewed via GitHub pages at:
https://jmablog.github.io/jamovi-worksheets/
Pop-out boxes: Use Pandoc's fenced divs feature to create coloured breakout boxes:
::: Aside
Contents here.
:::
The current options are Aside
(yellow), Questions
(grey), Tip
(blue), Success
(green), and Warning
(red). Check the example outputs to see them in action.
LaTeX shortcuts: Use \wordtoc
to insert a Word table of contents, as this won't be automatically generated when use toc
options in Pandoc, and \newpage
for a manual page break.
Auto-link questions and answers: Use Pandoc's bracketed spans feature to create linked questions and answers using Q and A:
[Q1]{}. The number of this question will be auto-linked to A1 wherever it appears on the page.
...
[A1]{}. This answer is auto-linked to Q1 above.
References: Store your bibliography using biblatex in _bib/references.bib
. Create citations in text with Pandoc's citation format, e.g. [@Adams2020]
. A full reference list will be automatically placed at the end of the output document, or can be placed anywhere using a fenced div with the id #refs
.
:::{#refs}
:::
- Install Quarto. Some additional dependencies may be required, for example, a TeX installation if you don't have one already, or Python/R if you intend to use them in your materials - see the Quarto installation page for full details. You might also want to grab Open Sans for the PDF font, or else change it to one you already have in
_quarto.yml
. - Clone or download this repo to your local machine.
- From a terminal at the base project directory, simply run
quarto render
. The output files should appear alongside the input markdown files.
If (like me) you want to store your outputs alongside your inputs rather than in their own sub-directory (_WORKSHEETS
), then a post-render step can be added to move all the output files back into their source directories and then cleanup the output directory. This script is written in Typescript to run in Deno, which is included with Quarto, so no extra dependencies are required. It reads the output directory you are using from the _quarto.yml
file, cycles through all the files and files in sub-directories (to one level deep) in that output directory, and moves them back alongside their source input files.
In _quarto.yml
, simply uncomment the line post-render: _resources/scripts/return-to-source.ts
to use this script.
The _quarto.yml
file contains most of the configuration options for these worksheet - in particular, a lot of the PDF output formatting such as fonts (by default I used Open Sans) or page margins. These are all either Quarto project options or Pandoc options - add or change these as desired.
For further customisation, you can simply make changes to the templates themselves in _resources/templates
. They are named for each output format. If you know CSS / LaTeX / Word styles, go nuts!
The html template used is gently adapted from the GitHub Pandoc HTML5 template from the pandoc-goodies repository by Tristano Ajmone.
Pandoc lua filters are inspired and adapted from examples given in the Pandoc lua filters GitHub repo.