This helper function is to be used with the tab_style()
function, which
itself allows for the setting of custom styles to one or more cells. We can
also define several styles within a single call of cell_text()
and
tab_style()
will reliably apply those styles to the targeted element.
cell_text(
color = NULL,
font = NULL,
size = NULL,
align = NULL,
v_align = NULL,
style = NULL,
weight = NULL,
stretch = NULL,
decorate = NULL,
transform = NULL,
whitespace = NULL,
indent = NULL
)
A list object of class cell_styles
.
The text color.
The font or collection of fonts (subsequent font names are) used as fallbacks.
The size of the font. Can be provided as a number that is assumed
to represent px
values (or could be wrapped in the px()
) helper
function. We can also use one of the following absolute size keywords:
"xx-small"
, "x-small"
, "small"
, "medium"
, "large"
, "x-large"
,
or "xx-large"
.
The text alignment. Can be one of either "center"
, "left"
,
"right"
, or "justify"
.
The vertical alignment of the text in the cell. Options are
"middle"
, "top"
, or "bottom"
.
The text style. Can be one of either "normal"
, "italic"
, or
"oblique"
.
The weight of the font. Can be a text-based keyword such as
"normal"
, "bold"
, "lighter"
, "bolder"
, or, a numeric value between
1
and 1000
, inclusive. Note that only variable fonts may support the
numeric mapping of weight.
Allows for text to either be condensed or expanded. We can use
one of the following text-based keywords to describe the degree of
condensation/expansion: "ultra-condensed"
, "extra-condensed"
,
"condensed"
, "semi-condensed"
, "normal"
, "semi-expanded"
,
"expanded"
, "extra-expanded"
, or "ultra-expanded"
. Alternatively, we
can supply percentage values from 0\%
to 200\%
, inclusive. Negative
percentage values are not allowed.
Allows for text decoration effect to be applied. Here, we can
use "overline"
, "line-through"
, or "underline"
.
Allows for the transformation of text. Options are
"uppercase"
, "lowercase"
, or "capitalize"
.
A white-space preservation option. By default, runs of
white-space will be collapsed into single spaces but several options exist
to govern how white-space is collapsed and how lines might wrap at
soft-wrap opportunities. The keyword options are "normal"
, "nowrap"
,
"pre"
, "pre-wrap"
, "pre-line"
, and "break-spaces"
.
The indentation of the text. Can be provided as a number that
is assumed to represent px
values (or could be wrapped in the px()
)
helper function. Alternatively, this can be given as a percentage (easily
constructed with pct()
).
Use exibble
to create a gt table. Add styles with tab_style()
and
the cell_text()
helper function.
exibble %>%
dplyr::select(num, currency) %>%
gt() %>%
fmt_number(
columns = c(num, currency),
decimals = 1
) %>%
tab_style(
style = cell_text(weight = "bold"),
locations = cells_body(
columns = num,
rows = num >= 5000
)
) %>%
tab_style(
style = cell_text(style = "italic"),
locations = cells_body(
columns = currency,
rows = currency < 100
)
)
7-20
Other helper functions:
adjust_luminance()
,
cell_borders()
,
cell_fill()
,
cells_body()
,
cells_column_labels()
,
cells_column_spanners()
,
cells_footnotes()
,
cells_grand_summary()
,
cells_row_groups()
,
cells_source_notes()
,
cells_stub_grand_summary()
,
cells_stub_summary()
,
cells_stubhead()
,
cells_stub()
,
cells_summary()
,
cells_title()
,
currency()
,
default_fonts()
,
escape_latex()
,
google_font()
,
gt_latex_dependencies()
,
html()
,
md()
,
pct()
,
px()
,
random_id()
,
stub()