Greg Snow wrote:
When I work with clients who want to cut and paste to word or powerpoint I usually use the odfWeave package, set up a template file with the tables and graphs (possibly other output), then I run that through odfWeave and then use openoffice to save the results as a word file that I can send to the client (and they happily copy and paste from it). There is also development on Sword (still in beta) from the people who brought us Rexcel. It works similarly, but directly with word, I will probably start using it more in the future. Hope this helps,
Another option if you don't want to go the whole route of learning odfWeave is hwriter. Not sure how it works for a lot of text, but if you just want graphs and tables, it is very straightforward. I just used it recently and found it pretty simple. Another option for producing html is R2html but I didn't try it because I tried hwriter first and it worked for what I wanted. The advantages supplying in this form for those who just live in the Microsoft World are that you can output graphs in windows metafile format and they can see them in IE (not Firefox), and copy and paste into MS Office applications. David Scott
_________________________________________________________________ David Scott Department of Statistics The University of Auckland, PB 92019 Auckland 1142, NEW ZEALAND Phone: +64 9 923 5055, or +64 9 373 7599 ext 85055 Email: d.scott at auckland.ac.nz, Fax: +64 9 373 7018 Director of Consulting, Department of Statistics