Talk to be given at rstudio::conf, San Francisco. Over the last few years, Rmarkdown seems to have taken over my life, or at least my written communication. These days I use Rmarkdown to maintain my website, write my blog, write textbooks, write academic papers, prepare slides for talks, keep my CV up-to-date, help my students write theses, prepare university policy documents, write letters, prepare exams, write reports for clients, and more.<img src=“http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/ProfessorRobJHyndman/~4/B7A9z1HPYCQ" height=“1” width=“1” …