\name{writeRepositoryHtml}
\alias{writeRepositoryHtml}
\title{Write package descriptions and a repository index as HTML}
\description{
This function generates an HTML file for each package in a repository
and generates an \code{index.html} file that provides an alphabetized
listing of the packages.
}
\usage{
writeRepositoryHtml(reposRoot, title, reposUrl = "..", viewUrl = "../..",
reposFullUrl=reposUrl, downloadStatsUrl="",
devHistoryUrl="", link.rel = TRUE,
backgroundColor="transparent")
}
\arguments{
\item{reposRoot}{string specifying the path to the root of the
CRAN-style package repository.}
\item{title}{string giving the title for the repository}
\item{reposUrl}{string giving the prefix for URL in links
generated on the package description pages. The default is
\code{"..."} which works well if the package description HTML files
are written to an \code{html} subdirectory under the root of the
repository.}
\item{viewUrl}{string giving the prefix for the URL in links to the
view pages. The biocViews terms will be linked to views summary
pages with this prefix.}
\item{reposFullUrl}{string giving the full prefix for URL in links
generated on the package description pages. The default is
\code{reposUrl}.}
\item{downloadStatsUrl}{string giving the prefix for the URL in links
to the download history statistics pages.}
\item{devHistoryUrl}{string giving the prefix for the URL in links
to the development changelog.}
\item{link.rel}{logical indicating whether the index page should
generate relative URL links. The default is \code{TRUE}. If you are
generating HTML for a remote repository, you will want to set this to
\code{FALSE}.}
\item{backgroundColor}{A character vector giving the background color
for the body in the CSS file.}
}
\author{Seth Falcon}
\keyword{utilities}