% File src/library/base/man/formatDL.Rd % Part of the R package, http://www.R-project.org % Copyright 1995-2007 R Core Team % Distributed under GPL 2 or later \name{formatDL} \alias{formatDL} \title{Format Description Lists} \description{Format vectors of items and their descriptions as 2-column tables or LaTeX-style description lists. } \usage{ formatDL(x, y, style = c("table", "list"), width = 0.9 * getOption("width"), indent = NULL) } \arguments{ \item{x}{a vector giving the items to be described, or a list of length 2 or a matrix with 2 columns giving both items and descriptions.} \item{y}{a vector of the same length as \code{x} with the corresponding descriptions. Only used if \code{x} does not already give the descriptions.} \item{style}{a character string specifying the rendering style of the description information. If \code{"table"}, a two-column table with items and descriptions as columns is produced (similar to Texinfo's \verb{@table} environment. If \code{"list"}, a LaTeX-style tagged description list is obtained.} \item{width}{a positive integer giving the target column for wrapping lines in the output.} \item{indent}{a positive integer specifying the indentation of the second column in table style, and the indentation of continuation lines in list style. Must not be greater than \code{width/2}, and defaults to \code{width/3} for table style and \code{width/9} for list style.} } \value{ a character vector with the formatted entries. } \details{ After extracting the vectors of items and corresponding descriptions from the arguments, both are coerced to character vectors. In table style, items with more than \code{indent - 3} characters are displayed on a line of their own. } \examples{ ## Provide a nice summary of the numerical characteristics of the ## machine R is running on: writeLines(formatDL(unlist(.Machine))) ## Inspect Sys.getenv() results in "list" style (by default, these are ## printed in "table" style): writeLines(formatDL(Sys.getenv(), style = "list")) } \keyword{print}