Have you ever tried to find a lightweight yet nice theme for the R Markdown documents, like this page?
With the powerful rmarkdown package, we could easily create nice HTML document by adding some meta information in the header, for example
---
title: Nineteen Years Later
author: Harry Potter
date: July 31, 2016
output:
rmarkdown::html_document:
theme: lumen
---
The html_document engine uses the Bootswatch theme library to support different styles of the document. This is a quick and easy way to tune the appearance of your document, yet with the price of a large file size (> 700KB) since the whole Bootstrap library needs to be packed in.
For package vignettes, we can use the html_vignette engine to generate a more lightweight HTML file that is meant to minimize the package size, but the output HTML is less stylish than the html_document
ones.
So can we do BOTH, a lightweight yet nice-looking theme for R Markdown?
The answer is YES! (At least towards that direction)
The prettydoc package provides an alternative engine, html_pretty
, to knit your R Markdown document into pretty HTML pages. Its usage is extremely easy: simply replace the rmarkdown::html_document
or rmarkdown::html_vignette
output engine by prettydoc::html_pretty
in your R Markdown header, and use one of the built-in themes and syntax highlighters. For example
---
title: Nineteen Years Later
author: Harry Potter
date: July 31, 2016
output:
prettydoc::html_pretty:
theme: cayman
highlight: github
---
You can also create documents from prettydoc templates in RStudio.
Step 1: Click the “New File” button and choose “R Markdown”.
Step 2: In the “From Template” tab, choose one of the built-in templates.
The options for the html_pretty
engine are mostly compatible with the default html_document
(see the documentation) with a few exceptions:
theme
option can take the following values. More themes will be added in the future.
highlight
option takes value from github
and vignette
.math
parameter to choose between mathjax
and katex
for rendering math expressions. The katex
option supports offline display when there is no internet connection.code_folding
, code_download
and toc_float
are not applicable.By default, html_pretty
uses MathJax to render math expressions. However, using MathJax requires an internet connection. If you need to create documents that can show math expressions offline, simply add one line math: katex
to the document metadata:
---
title: Nineteen Years Later
author: Harry Potter
date: July 31, 2016
output:
prettydoc::html_pretty:
theme: cayman
highlight: github
math: katex
---
This option will enable KaTeX for rendering the math expressions, and all resource files will be included in for offline viewing. The offline document will be ~800k larger.
Here are some screenshots of the HTML pages generated by prettydoc with different themes and syntax highlighters.