\name{includeHTML} \alias{includeHTML} \alias{includeText} \alias{includeMarkdown} \usage{ includeHTML(path) includeText(path) includeMarkdown(path) } \title{Include Content From a File} \arguments{ \item{path}{ The path of the file to be included. It is highly recommended to use a relative path (the base path being the Shiny application directory), not an absolute path. } } \description{ Include HTML, text, or rendered Markdown into a \link[=shinyUI]{Shiny UI}. } \details{ These functions provide a convenient way to include an extensive amount of HTML, textual, or Markdown content, rather than using a large literal R string. } \note{ \code{includeText} escapes its contents, but does no other processing. This means that hard breaks and multiple spaces will be rendered as they usually are in HTML: as a single space character. If you are looking for preformatted text, wrap the call with \code{\link{pre}}, or consider using \code{includeMarkdown} instead. } \note{ The \code{includeMarkdown} function requires the \code{markdown} package. } \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)) }