#quarto hive mind. I'm working on a project where I want to generate graphs in Julia but I don't want to show any of the code that generates the graph. The point of the project is to discuss how to do mathematical models without reference to any particular kind of code, so I want to plot data, but not distract the reader with syntax. Are there options to include "hidden" cells to do the plots, but still show the graphical output?
@kfitz depending of the amount of customisation you have for your Reveal.js presentation, you can put most (if not all) in your markdown/Quarto document.
If you host your “qmd” file on GitHub, there are GitHub Actions to render and publish to GitHub Pages and other platforms.
Note that you can also publish manually.
I have a #Quarto question: Is there any main advantage over using plain #pandoc if you don't use #knitr style code execution? Like for regular academic writing without dynamic computation?
Really excited to launch The Journal for Visualization and Interaction (JoVI)! A new open journal for #VIS and #HCI
Best part (IMO) is the experimental track, where you can submit papers using @Posit's #quarto and have them reviewed via Github. Also means interactive papers (e.g. using JavaScript @observablehq) are supported!