I am writing a beamer presentation in rmarkdown and converting it to pdf with knitr. I want to define sections at the header1 level, e.g. # Introduction, and then have a slide titled something else e.g. ## Introducing my brilliant research. Having the header1 level define sections is nice as the names of the sections can be displayed in the slide header in certain beamer themes, and this is why I include it.
But I do not want rmarkdown to insert a slide that simply says the name of the section between sections, which at the moment it is doing. Is there a way to not print a slide with the section name between sections? I thought slide_level would control this behavior but it does not seem to (or perhaps I am using it wrong).
A minimal reproducible example of my problem can be obtained with this code:
---
title: "Test Pres"
author: "Professor Genius Researcher"
date: "24 February 2017"
output:
beamer_presentation:
slide_level: 2
theme: "Singapore"
colortheme: "rose"
---
```{r setup, include=FALSE}
knitr::opts_chunk$set(echo = FALSE)
```
# Markdown Intro
## R Markdown
This is an R Markdown presentation. Markdown is a simple formatting syntax for authoring HTML, PDF, and MS Word documents. For more details on using R Markdown see <http://rmarkdown.rstudio.com>.
When you click the **Knit** button a document will be generated that includes both content as well as the output of any embedded R code chunks within the document.
# Using Bullets
## Slide with Bullets
- Bullet 1
- Bullet 2
- Bullet 3
# Including Chunks
## Slide with R Output
```{r cars, echo = TRUE}
summary(cars)
```
## Slide with Plot
```{r pressure}
plot(pressure)
```
At the moment, this code produces slides that say Markdown Intro, Using Bullets, and Including Chunks. I would like those slides labeling the sections omitted. Is this possible?
Create a new Latex template where you remove this part from the preamble:
\AtBeginSection[]
{
....
}
Place this latex template in the same folder as your .Rmd file and refer to it in the Rmd Yaml front matter using template: mytemplate.tex as explained here.
Related
I am trying to include my company logo in an R markdown report. The output has to be pdf. The logo has to be used as a template on every page of the report in the top left of the file. Just for example, you can use this google logo https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google#/media/File:Google_2015_logo.svg
I want the report to look like this (sorry for the blurry image but I just wanted to give an example) -
The google logo on top left should be present on every page.
I have done searches but all the searches that I have done are showing how to do this using latex or HTML output.
https://bookdown.org/yihui/rmarkdown-cookbook/latex-logo.html
Insert a logo in upper right corner of R markdown pdf document
2 Logo in R Markdown on PDF
add image in title page of rmarkdown pdf
The closest I have came is with this markdown document that is called reports.Rmd which looks like -
---
title: "Report"
output: pdf_document
params:
study: NA
mid : NA
---
![Caption.](google.png)
```{r, echo=FALSE}
paste0("Study : ", params$study)
paste0("ID", params$mid)
```
and I run this from another R script as -
library(rmarkdown)
study <- 'ABC'
mid <- '73023'
rmarkdown::render('reports.Rmd', pdf_document(), params = list(
study = study, mid = mid
))
This runs and produce this output
I'll be able to resize the image with How to set size for local image using knitr for markdown? but I don't know how to place this on top left of the page. Thank you for reading.
This is a template for you:
---
title: 'You are really need to use LaTeX'
author: "You"
date: "`r Sys.Date()`"
output:
pdf_document
header-includes:
\usepackage{fancyhdr}
\usepackage{graphicx}
---
```{r setup, include=FALSE}
knitr::opts_chunk$set(echo = TRUE)
```
\addtolength{\headheight}{3.0cm}
\fancypagestyle{plain}{}
\pagestyle{fancy}
\fancyhead[R]{\includegraphics[width = 100pt]{your_pic.png}}
\renewcommand{\headrulewidth}{0pt}
This is an R Markdown document. Markdown is a simple formatting syntax for
authoring HTML, PDF, and MS Word documents. For more details on using R Markdown
see <http://rmarkdown.rstudio.com>.
and blah-blah...
So, don't forget to install LaTeX and packages fancyhdr, graphics.
How to do it, you can see there.
Or you can install MikTeX etc. You can find a lot of info at the SO/in the web.
The knowledge of LaTeX will save you not once a time in the future life ;)
I'm using R markdown to create a presentation, and I would really like to add a custom background on my opening slide and second slide. Currently, I have my potential themes on a separate PowerPoint document. Is there any way to add backgrounds like that?
Thanks!
To add a custom background, one can create a powerpoint template, e.g. my-styles.pptx where the background image is placed at the slide master.
Then create an Rmarkdown file like follows and place it in the same folder:
---
title: "Fancy Slides"
author: "Creative Author"
date: "2021-06-09"
output:
powerpoint_presentation:
reference_doc: my-styles.pptx
---
```{r setup, include=FALSE}
knitr::opts_chunk$set(echo = FALSE)
```
## Slide with Bullets
- Bullet 1
- Bullet 2
- Bullet 3
## Slide with R Output
```{r cars, echo = TRUE}
summary(cars)
```
More about this can be found in Yihui Xie et al. (2021) R Markdown: The Definitive Guide, Section 4.4.
Tested with RStudio Version 1.4.1714 and Powerpoint 2016.
When declaring output format in YAML section of my Rmarkdown document, is there a way to make sure it knits to PDF, but looks like a knitted HTML?
Nothing about knitted PDF looks the same: the font is some flavor of serif (assume I can change that), blockquotes and code chunks look different.
I like knitted HTML and the look, but is there a way to generate a PDF looking exactly the same?
As an example, just a simple default sample code:
---
title: "Untitled"
output:
html_document: default
pdf_document: default
---
```{r setup, include=FALSE}
knitr::opts_chunk$set(echo = TRUE)
```
## R Markdown
This is an R Markdown document. Markdown is a simple formatting syntax for authoring HTML, PDF, and MS Word documents. For more details on using R Markdown see <http://rmarkdown.rstudio.com>.
> This is a quote
This is a link: <http://rmarkdown.rstudio.com>
When you click the **Knit** button a document will be generated that includes both content as well as the output of any embedded R code chunks within the document. You can embed an R code chunk like this:
```{r cars}
summary(cars)
```
Here are 2 samples how 2 outputs look out of the box
I want to produce a beamer presentation from a RMarkdown file.
I am in this case using this beautiful template: https://github.com/matze/mtheme
How in markdown can you specify that you want to insert, not a "normal" slide, by a special one, such as an appendix slide, or a standout slide?
This template contains a standout slide that I would like to use as final slide as they do in their demo slides (http://mirrors.standaloneinstaller.com/ctan/macros/latex/contrib/beamer-contrib/themes/metropolis/demo/demo.pdf)
In beamer, I would do:
\begin{frame}[standout]
Questions?
\end{frame}
What is the equivalent in Markdown?
Setting frame options is pretty straight forward:
---
title: "Untitled"
output: beamer_presentation
theme: "metropolis"
---
```{r setup, include=FALSE}
knitr::opts_chunk$set(echo = FALSE)
```
## {.standout}
Questions?
I am using rmarkdown to make beamer presentations in RStudio. I would want to get slide tickers on the top of presentation. Dresden theme should support those tickersDresden
So is it possible to get those tickers by using rmarkdown? When I knit pdf I get presentation without slide tickers.
Example code:
---
title: "Example"
output: beamer_presentation
theme: Dresden
---
# R Markdown
This is an R Markdown presentation. Markdown is a simple formatting syntax for authoring HTML, PDF, and MS Word documents. For more details on using R Markdown see <http://rmarkdown.rstudio.com>.
When you click the **Knit** button a document will be generated that includes both content as well as the output of any embedded R code chunks within the document.
# Slide with Bullets
- Bullet 1
- Bullet 2
- Bullet 3
# Slide with R Code and Output
```{r}
summary(cars)
```
# Slide with Plot
```{r, echo=FALSE}
plot(cars)
```
I think the slide_level option might be what you are looking for:
The slide_level option defines the heading level that defines individual slides. By default this is the highest header level in the hierarchy that is followed immediately by content, and not another header, somewhere in the document. This default can be overridden by specifying an explicit slide_level
documentation source
For example with the slide_level: 2:
---
title: "Example"
output:
beamer_presentation:
slide_level: 2
theme: Dresden
---
gives you the following output
However you need to provide a lower level of the heading for the slide title, e.g.
# R Markdown
## Description
This is an R Markdown presentation. Markdown is a simple formatting
syntax for authoring HTML, PDF, and MS Word documents. For more
details on using R Markdown see <http://rmarkdown.rstudio.com>.
When you click the **Knit** button a document will be generated that
includes both content as well as the output of any embedded R code
chunks within the document.
Edit To get the output same as in the image you have attached, you section your presentation in the following way:
---
title: "Example"
output:
beamer_presentation:
slide_level: 3
theme: Dresden
---
# Section 1
## Subsection 1
### Title A
### Title B
## Subsection 2
### Title A
## Subsection 3
### Title A
### Title B
### Title C
# Section 2
## Subsection 1
### Title A
### Title B
and the following presentation heading is generated: