Formats for converting from R Markdown to a PDF or LaTeX document.
pdf_document(
toc = FALSE,
toc_depth = 2,
number_sections = FALSE,
fig_width = 6.5,
fig_height = 4.5,
fig_crop = "auto",
fig_caption = TRUE,
dev = "pdf",
df_print = "default",
highlight = "default",
template = "default",
keep_tex = FALSE,
keep_md = FALSE,
latex_engine = "pdflatex",
citation_package = c("default", "natbib", "biblatex"),
includes = NULL,
md_extensions = NULL,
output_extensions = NULL,
pandoc_args = NULL,
extra_dependencies = NULL
)latex_document(...)
latex_fragment(...)
R Markdown output format to pass to render
TRUE
to include a table of contents in the output
Depth of headers to include in table of contents
TRUE
to number section headings
Default width (in inches) for figures
Default height (in inches) for figures
Whether to crop PDF figures with the command
pdfcrop
. This requires the tools pdfcrop
and
ghostscript
to be installed. By default, fig_crop = TRUE
if these two tools are available.
TRUE
to render figures with captions
Graphics device to use for figure output (defaults to pdf)
Method to be used for printing data frames. Valid values
include "default", "kable", "tibble", and "paged". The "default" method
uses a corresponding S3 method of print
, typically
print.data.frame
. The "kable" method uses the
knitr::kable
function. The "tibble" method uses
the tibble package to print a summary of the data frame. The "paged"
method creates a paginated HTML table (note that this method is only valid
for formats that produce HTML). In addition to the named methods you can
also pass an arbitrary function to be used for printing data frames. You
can disable the df_print
behavior entirely by setting the option
rmarkdown.df_print
to FALSE
. See
Data
frame printing section in bookdown book for examples.
Syntax highlighting style passed to Pandoc.
Supported built-in styles include "default", "tango", "pygments", "kate", "monochrome", "espresso", "zenburn", "haddock", and "breezedark".
Two custom styles are also included, "arrow", an accessible color scheme, and "rstudio", which mimics the default IDE theme. Alternatively, supply a path to a .theme file to use a custom Pandoc style. Note that custom theme requires Pandoc 2.0+.
Pass NULL
to prevent syntax highlighting.
Pandoc template to use for rendering. Pass "default" to use
the rmarkdown package default template; pass NULL
to use pandoc's
built-in template; pass a path to use a custom template that you've
created. See the documentation on
pandoc online documentation for
details on creating custom templates.
Keep the intermediate tex file used in the conversion to PDF
Keep the markdown file generated by knitting.
LaTeX engine for producing PDF output. Options are "pdflatex", "lualatex", "xelatex" and "tectonic".
The LaTeX package to process citations, natbib
or biblatex
. Use default
if neither package is to be used,
which means citations will be processed via the command
pandoc-citeproc
.
Named list of additional content to include within the
document (typically created using the includes
function).
Markdown extensions to be added or removed from the
default definition of R Markdown. See the rmarkdown_format
for
additional details.
Pandoc extensions to be added or removed from the
output format, e.g., "-smart"
means the output format will be
latex-smart
.
Additional command line options to pass to pandoc
A LaTeX dependency latex_dependency()
, a
list of LaTeX dependencies, a character vector of LaTeX package names (e.g.
c("framed", "hyperref")
), or a named list of LaTeX package options
with the names being package names (e.g. list(hyperef =
c("unicode=true", "breaklinks=true"), lmodern = NULL)
). It can be used to
add custom LaTeX packages to the .tex header.
Arguments passed to pdf_document()
.
See the online
documentation for additional details on using the pdf_document
format.
Creating PDF output from R Markdown requires that LaTeX be installed.
R Markdown documents can have optional metadata that is used to generate a document header that includes the title, author, and date. For more details see the documentation on R Markdown metadata.
R Markdown documents also support citations. You can find more information on the markdown syntax for citations in the Bibliographies and Citations article in the online documentation.
Many aspects of the LaTeX template used to create PDF documents can be customized using metadata. For example:
--- |
title: "Crop Analysis Q3 2013" |
fontsize: 11pt |
geometry: margin=1in |
--- |
Available metadata variables include:
lang
Document language code (e.g. "es", "fr", "pt-BR")
fontsize
Font size (e.g. 10pt, 11pt, 12pt)
documentclass
LaTeX document class (e.g. article)
classoption
Option for documentclass
(e.g. oneside); may be repeated
geometry
Options for geometry class (e.g. margin=1in); may be repeated
mainfont, sansfont, monofont, mathfont
Document fonts (works only with xelatex and lualatex, see the latex_engine
option)
linkcolor, urlcolor, citecolor
Color for internal, external, and citation links (red, green, magenta, cyan, blue, black)
linestretch
Options for line spacing (e.g. 1, 1.5, 3)
if (FALSE) {
library(rmarkdown)
# simple invocation
render("input.Rmd", pdf_document())
# specify an option for latex engine
render("input.Rmd", pdf_document(latex_engine = "lualatex"))
# add a table of contents and pass an option to pandoc
render("input.Rmd", pdf_document(toc = TRUE, "--listings"))
}
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