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Overview

Reports are regularly updated outputs related to the COVID-19 pandemic, created with the OpenSAFELY platform.

This service is currently in a pilot phase for external users.

They are hosted on the reports site.

Best practices🔗

To ensure that the file is self-contained, all images must be in-line rather than published as separate files. OpenSAFELY Reports only supports using one file for a report, in-lining images will allow you to use them within a report. Images should be bitmaps rather than in vector graphics formats, PNG is suggested as a good option.

Reports are static; there is no facility for dynamic content. Any JavaScript that the report contains will be stripped out by OpenSAFELY Reports.

All styling is applied by OpenSAFELY Reports; any styles included in the file will be stripped out.

Producing reports🔗

Reports that are hosted on the reports site have to be in the html file format. We recommend producing these files using either Jupyter notebooks or R Markdown; below is some guidance on how to use them.

Jupyter notebooks🔗

Jupyter notebooks provide an interactive environment for developing code which allows you to incorporate contextual text with code blocks. OpenSAFELY Reports is designed to work with Jupyter notebooks. It has automatic styling for the standard markup that Jupyter produces.

You can refer to our instructions on running a Jupyter environment in OpenSAFELY.

These guidelines for writing notebooks makes them consistent with the best practices in the section above.

  • Render matplotlib charts inline with this directive: %matplotlib inline.
  • Configure matplotlib to output PNG charts with this directive: %config InlineBackend.figure_format='png'.
  • Do not add interactivity features to your charts.
  • If your notebook writes text using Python's print() function, it will be rendered in the final report as "preformatted" text, that is with a monospaced font. This may not be what you want and is inappropriate for body text. Instead you should use the display() and Markdown() functions from the IPython.display package, like this: display(Markdown("Some text which can be Markdown formatted.")).

This can be achieved by including the code block below in a code cell. This also shows you how to incorporate tables and figures into your notebook.

%matplotlib inline
%config InlineBackend

import pandas as pd
from IPython.display import HTML, display, Markdown, Image

table = pd.read_csv('output/table.csv')

table = display(
    HTML(
        table.to_html(index=False)
        )
    )

img = display(
    Image(filename='output/figure.png')
    )

value = 10

text = display(
    Markdown("Some text which can be Markdown formatted.")
    )

For more details on formatting markdown cells, refer to this summary of Markdown formatting.

Converting Jupyter notebooks to html🔗

You can convert your notebook to HTML using nbconvert, with the basic template, like this:

nbconvert my-notebook.ipynb --execute --to html --template basic --no-input

This removes any code blocks in the notebook from the rendered html; to keep them you can remove the no-input flag.

To run this within an OpenSAFELY action, you can use the following run command:

run: jupyter:latest jupyter nbconvert /workspace/analysis/notebook.ipynb --execute --to html --output-dir=/workspace/output --no-input --ExecutePreprocessor.timeout=86400

Refer to an example of this, implemented as an OpenSAFELY action.

R Markdown🔗

Similarly to Jupyter notebooks, R markdown allows you to combine narrative text and formatted code blocks. See the installation instructions for R Markdown.

This markdown cheatsheet is a useful reference for formatting markdown files, including how to add tables and figures.

To make R markdown files consistent with the best practices in the section above:

  • Use the default theme by setting the theme to null in the markdown metadata (see below)
  • Hide code blocks unless you want to display them by adding include=False when specifying a code block.
  • Do not add interactivity features to your charts.

An example R markdown document is shown below:

---
title: "A very interesting report"
output:
  html_document:
    theme: null
    highlight: null
    mathjax: null
    toc: false
    fig_caption: false
    df_print: default
---

```{r echo=FALSE}
library(readr)
library(knitr)
knitr::opts_chunk$set( echo=FALSE, message=FALSE )
```

## A table

Find below a table of interest.

```{r}
read_csv("output/table.csv")
```

## A figure

Find below a figure of interest.

![Figure legend](output/figure.png)

## Another section

```{r}
value = 10
```

Some text which can be *Markdown* formatted.
The value is `r value`.

Converting R markdown files to html🔗

In OpenSAFELY, you can convert an R markdown file to html file by including the following run command in an action.

run: r:latest -e 'rmarkdown::render("path_to_report", output_dir = "/workspace/output/",knit_root_dir = "/workspace",)'

Next step🔗

Start by creating a report.