I want to use Times New Roman font in a .docx file using R markdown. I have tried adding the following in the YAML section:
mainfont: "Times New Roman", sansfont: Calibri Light - both with and without quotes. I also specified a template:
output:
word_document:
reference_docx: template1.docx
I had generated template1.docx using R markdown and changed some of the formattings like margin, line number, font size, font face, etc. and everything, but the font face gets copied to the main .docx file. Please help.
The mainfont argument only works for pdf output.
To make your Word document have a specific font, open your template document in Word. Go to the "Design" tab. The Fonts button allows you to select the default fonts for your headings and body text.
You can create your own font pairings if one of the available options is not to your liking. For example, you can create an option with Times New Roman for both headings and body text
Related
I am making slides with slidify. In my title that is to be specified in the index.Rmd YAML header, I need to use a subscript, e.g. H20.
in Rmarkdown, I would do H~2~0. That does not work.
in Markdown, I would do H<sub>2</sub>O. That does not work
in mathjax that can be loaded as widget, I would use H\(_2\)O. That works but the mathjax font and fontsize writting is much bigger than the normal title font and fontsize
Is there a clean way to write a subscript in the slidify title, like in latex?
I am kniting my Rmd to PPT using a custom PPT template with different types of slides. I have all headers/text set to Alright Sans Font, mostly size 11.
When I knit to PPT, that all works except the table ouput is calibri and way too large of font. How can i customize?
How do I reduce vertical spacing between numbered/bulleted lists?
I think this might need to happen in the PPT template but not sure.
I'm trying to reduce the size of a section of text within a qmd document that needs rendering in docx.
I tried using a styled div:
---
title: "Test"
format: docx
---
The main text will be normal-sized.
::: {style="font-size: 10pt;"}
This block of text should be sized 10pt.
:::
Observed output:
Intended outptut:
Of note, my code works well in html.
Is there another way of doing this with a docx output?
The styling process for docx is a little different: one needs to create a "reference doc", set the styles in that doc and apply it with
---
format:
docx:
reference-doc: my-styled-reference.docx
---
See How to specify the font used for word doc exported using pandoc? and How do I add custom formatting to docx files generated in Pandoc? for more details on this process.
I am trying to figure out in RMarkdown how to underline some words. If I am knitting to HTML I can do this:
<u>These words are underlined</u>
Which works fine in that case. But the underlining is not persisted when I knit to Microsoft Word. I don't believe any changes have been made to RMarkdown to natively do it such as the commands for bold and italics. Any suggestions?
Thanks
Simply you can use the underline class [Your text]{.underline}, which pandoc innately supports, as like the small caps class [Your text]{.smallcaps}. This method also works for the production of other formats, such as HTML and PDF.
---
title: "Untitled"
output: word_document
---
[Underlined text]{.underline}
[Small Capital text]{.smallcaps}
For what it's worth ... (; As far as I get it, this is not possible by using HTML tags. The reason why HTML tags work when rendering to HTML is that the HTML code is not touched upon by rmarkdown, knitr or pandoc and simply passed through to the final HTML document as text. In case of HTML the browser knows what to do with this "text". But in Word or Latex it's simply text which will be displayed as is.
However, for Word output you could have a look at the officedown package which adds some addtional Word functionalities to rmarkdown via the officer officer package , e.g. the following example RMD shows how to get underlined text in Word:
---
title: "officedown template"
output: officedown::rdocx_document
---
```{r setup, include=FALSE}
knitr::opts_chunk$set(echo = TRUE, fig.cap = TRUE)
library(officedown)
library(officer)
ft <- fp_text(underlined = TRUE)
```
This document presents most of the features of the package `r ftext("officedown", ft)`.
Just tried everything that came to my mind - seems to be not possible
(would be great to hear about actually working solutions)
I tried the following:
<u> text </u>
<ins> text </ins>
<span style="text-decoration:underline"> text </span>
$\text{\underline{LaTeX makes it possible}}$
$\underline{LaTeX makes it possible}$
While a most of these worked for html_document - none really worked for Rmarkdown to Word.
<u> - the obvious solution - didn't work.
<ins> which is also often suggested - didn't work.
html5 markup - didn't work
LaTeX - did not work
Might well be, that this just is not possible.
The problem has two parts:
1.) Getting Rmarkdown/pandoc to render the html when knitting to a word file. How to achieve this has been explained here: HTML tags in Rmarkdown to word document by user #tarleb (please consider upvoting that answer as it is the basis for mine).
2.) <u> for underlining has been more or less deprecated. However, the <u> tags simply have to be wrapped inside a <p> to work.
So this should achieve what you want:
---
output:
word_document:
md_extensions: +raw_html-markdown_in_html_blocks
pandoc_args: ['--lua-filter', 'read_html.lua']
---
<p><u>This text will be underlined.</u> This not anymore</p>
<u>But this will not.</u>
<p style="text-decoration: underline;">Neither will this.</p>
with a file read_html.lua in the same directory with this content:
function RawBlock (raw)
if raw.format:match 'html' and not FORMAT:match 'html' then
return pandoc.read(raw.text, raw.format).blocks
end
end
A workaround
RMarkdown is based on Pandoc, and Pandoc's Markdown does not natively support underline. Underline in Pandoc's Markdown is implemented by HTML tag <u>...</u>. However, <u>...</u> cannot be not converted into underline text in docx or pdf(tested with pandoc 2.10.1). A workaround is modifying the text style in MS Word.
Choose a substitute for <u>...</u>, such as ***...***.
---
output:
word_document: default
---
This is a regular paragraph.
***This paragraph is bold italic at first. It will be underlined later.***
Knit Rmarkdown document into docx
Replace bold italic text with underline text in Word.
Press Ctrl + H.
Set the text format in Format > Font.
Find Bold Italic text.
Replace with Regular Underline text.
Press Replace All
If you have used <u>...</u>, replace them with ***...***.
Press Ctrl + F.
check the regex option.
replace <u>(.+)<\/u> with ***$1*** .
Press All next to Replace.
Return to step 1 and step 2.
Advice
I recommend sticking to the native syntax of Rmarkdown and Pandoc's Markdown. Thought the syntax is limited, it works well with different output formats. Limited syntax is the power of Markdown! It is so simple that it can be converted into many different output formats. I also recommend following the concept of separation of content and style. It saves me from formatting contents repeatedly.
I've got an .Rmd I need to output using the word_document2 format with R bookdown. It has a .docx template which works fine for heading styles etc.
However, it appears that the figure/table captions are output using the "normal" style, so I can't control the font, size etc. on them as a group and am having to go through after the fact and change them all by hand. Is there a way to get bookdown to designate them to use Word's "caption" style, or alternatively to specify a custom style for them?
In your YAML header for your .Rmd, you can specify a Word doc to use as the basis for all formatting. Your rendered word doc will pick up all the styles from this reference_docx and apply them to your output:
---
title: "Example .Rmd"
output:
word_document:
toc: yes
reference_docx: word-styles-reference-01.docx
theme: hpstr
fontsize: 11pt
---
The Word file that I am using for styles is here: https://drive.google.com/open?id=1gSyE22hJbGdsTj6C-RWBTnyBVnG0XwB3
In trying to make a reproducible example, I found the problem (apologies for not including an example in the first place).
The issue wasn't with the .Rmd, but the reference .docx itself. It had a "Caption" style, but for some reason it didn't have "Image Caption" or "Table Caption" styles, which is what markdown was looking for. I copied those styles over from another Word document according to these instructions, and now it works fine.