Quarto 1.9 replaces Puppeteer Chromium with Chrome Headless Shell — smaller, arm64-ready, and Docker-friendly
Quarto 1.3 adds support for publishing individual documents, and projects containing many documents to Atlassian Confluence
Quarto 1.3 adds support for embedding cells from a Jupyter Notebook into a Quarto document via an embed shortcode. In HTML documents, links are automatically added that point to a rendered version of the external notebook
In Quarto 1.3, additional formats listed in HTML documents will automatically be linked in an “Other Formats” section near the top of the page
In Quarto 1.3, you can add line based annotations to code chunks to highlight or explain parts of your code
With Shinylive, you can embed Shiny for Python applications into Quarto documents and run the entire application (including the Python runtime) inside the user’s web browser
Quarto Extensions are a powerful way to modify or extend the behavior of Quarto, and can be created and distributed by anyone. Extension types include filters, shortcodes, and custom formats
This post demonstrates a few of the capabilities for positioning content in the margin of the page. You can read more about the complete capabilities in the Article Layout Guide
This post provides an overview of these capabilities in Quarto. For more detail about all the features Quarto for authoring tables, see Tables
Callouts are an excellent way to draw extra attention to certain concepts, or to more clearly indicate that certain content is supplemental or applicable to only some scenarios
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