Print out a Worksheet for an Experimental Design

DESCRIPTION:

Prints out a worksheet of a designed experiment, with blank columns for the responses.

USAGE:

worksheet(df, responses, graphics = F,  
          npages = ceiling(nrow(df)/32), ...) 

REQUIRED ARGUMENTS:

df
a data frame, or an object that inherits from data.frame.

OPTIONAL ARGUMENTS:

responses
an integer, giving number of responses, or vector of response names.
graphics
logical value indicating whether to print the form using a graphics device. The default uses lpr on UNIX or objprint on windows. The output from the graphics device is often more attractive than that sent directly to the printer.
npages
integer for number of pages used when graphics = TRUE. Gives control over font size used in graphics window.

SIDE EFFECTS:

A design is printed using lpr on UNIX, objprint on Windows, or a text layout appears on the current graphics device.

DETAILS:

This function is often used in conjunction with randomize.design to print a design for collecting experimental data.

SEE ALSO:

, , , .

EXAMPLES:

a.design <- design.digest('ff0308') 
# sends the results to the printer 
worksheet(a.design, responses = c('yield','purity')) 
worksheet(a.design, graphic = T) # uses the graphics device