% Generated by roxygen2: do not edit by hand % Please edit documentation in R/peerj_article.R \name{peerj_article} \alias{peerj_article} \title{PeerJ journal format.} \usage{ peerj_article(..., keep_tex = TRUE, citation_package = "none", base_format = rmarkdown::pdf_document) } \arguments{ \item{...}{Additional arguments to \code{base_format}} \item{keep_tex}{Keep the intermediate tex file used in the conversion to PDF} \item{citation_package}{The LaTeX package to process citations, \code{natbib} or \code{biblatex}. Use \code{none} if neither package is to be used.} \item{base_format}{The function to use for the base format of the article. By default, this is \code{rmarkdown::pdf_document}, but to use bookdown's cross-referencing feature, this can be set to \code{bookdown::pdf_document2}} } \value{ R Markdown output format to pass to \code{\link[rmarkdown:render]{render}} } \description{ Format for creating submissions to The PeerJ. } \details{ This was adapted from the \href{https://www.overleaf.com/latex/templates/latex-template-for-peerj-journal-and-pre-print-submissions/ptdwfrqxqzbn}{PeerJ Overleaf Template}. } \note{ If you use \code{rmarkdown::pdf_document()}, all internal references (i.e. tables and figures) must use \code{\\ref\{\}} whereas with \code{bookdown::pdf_document2()}, you can additionally use \code{\\@ref()}. } \examples{ \dontrun{ library(rmarkdown) draft("MyArticle.Rmd", template = "peerj_article", package = "rticles") } }