The preregr vignettes are themselves RMarkdown files.
Therefore, the human-readable (pre-)registrations shown there as an
example also caused the corresponding JSON to be embedded in those
vignettes.
This command imports this information from the preregr
Pkgdown website:
importedExample <-
preregr::import_from_html("https://preregr.opens.science/articles/specifying_prereg_content.html");We can then show the result:
importedExample;
#>
#> ── (Pre)registration specification ─────────────────────────────────────────────
#> ℹ Form: Inclusive Systematic Review Registration Form
#> ℹ 65 fields (3 completed, 62 empty)Or knit it into this vignette (which will then again also embed it as JSON, which can be imported again, etc):
preregr::prereg_knit_item_content(
importedExample,
section="metadata"
);It is also possible to initialize a new preregistration, using the form that was saved along with the preregistered content:
freshPrereg <-
preregr::prereg_initialize(
importedExample
);This yields an empty preregistration specification:
freshPrereg;
── (Pre)registration specification ─────────────────────────────────────────────
ℹ Form: Inclusive Systematic Review Registration Form
ℹ 65 fields (0 completed, 65 empty)This way, it’s easy to initialize a preregistration based on the form used by somebody else.