\name{builder} \alias{a} \alias{br} \alias{builder} \alias{code} \alias{div} \alias{em} \alias{h1} \alias{h2} \alias{h3} \alias{h4} \alias{h5} \alias{h6} \alias{hr} \alias{img} \alias{p} \alias{pre} \alias{span} \alias{strong} \alias{tags} \title{HTML Builder Functions} \usage{ tags p(...) h1(...) h2(...) h3(...) h4(...) h5(...) h6(...) a(...) br(...) div(...) span(...) pre(...) code(...) img(...) strong(...) em(...) hr(...) } \arguments{ \item{...}{Attributes and children of the element. Named arguments become attributes, and positional arguments become children. Valid children are tags, single-character character vectors (which become text nodes), and raw HTML (see \code{\link{HTML}}). You can also pass lists that contain tags, text nodes, and HTML.} } \description{ Simple functions for constructing HTML documents. } \details{ The \code{tags} environment contains convenience functions for all valid HTML5 tags. To generate tags that are not part of the HTML5 specification, you can use the \code{\link{tag}()} function. Dedicated functions are available for the most common HTML tags that do not conflict with common R functions. The result from these functions is a tag object, which can be converted using \code{\link[base]{as.character}()}. } \examples{ doc <- tags$html( tags$head( tags$title('My first page') ), tags$body( h1('My first heading'), p('My first paragraph, with some ', strong('bold'), ' text.'), div(id='myDiv', class='simpleDiv', 'Here is a div with some attributes.') ) ) cat(as.character(doc)) }