Core functionality of pander is centered around
pandoc.table, which is aimed at rendering tables in
markdown. In case of 2D tables, pander calls
pandoc.table internally, thus in such cases
pander and pandoc.table support the same
argument and in this vignette will be used iterchangingly.
pandoc.table has a wide variety of options (highlighting, styles, etc.) and this vignette aims to give a
more detailed overview of the most common options. pander
comes with a variety of globally adjustable options, which have an
effect on the result of your reports. You can query and update these
options with the panderOptions function.
Since pander aims at rendering R objects into Pandoc’s markdown all four
(multiline, simple, grid,
rmarkdown) of Pandoc’s
formats are supported. Users are advised to stick with the default
multiline style, but if there is a need to change it either
specify style argument when calling
pander/pandoc.table or change the default
style using panderOptions.
multiline tables allow headers and table rows to span
multiple lines of text (but cells that span multiple columns or rows of
the table are not supported). Also note that, for simplicity, line
breaks are removed from cells by default, so multiline cells are
typically the result of splitting large
cells or setting keep.line.breaks to
TRUE:
m <- data.frame('Value\n1', 'Value\n2')
colnames(m) <- c('Multiline\nCol1', 'Multiline\nCol2')
pandoc.table(m, keep.line.breaks = TRUE)
#>
#> -----------------------
#> Multiline Multiline
#> Col1 Col2
#> ----------- -----------
#> Value Value
#> 1 2
#> -----------------------
m <- mtcars[1:3, 1:4]
pandoc.table(m)
#>
#> ---------------------------------------------
#> mpg cyl disp hp
#> ------------------- ------ ----- ------ -----
#> Mazda RX4 21 6 160 110
#>
#> Mazda RX4 Wag 21 6 160 110
#>
#> Datsun 710 22.8 4 108 93
#> ---------------------------------------------simple tables are have more compact syntax that all
other styles, but don’t they support multiline cells:
m <- mtcars[1:3, 1:4]
pandoc.table(m, style = 'simple')
#>
#>
#> mpg cyl disp hp
#> ------------------- ------ ----- ------ -----
#> Mazda RX4 21 6 160 110
#> Mazda RX4 Wag 21 6 160 110
#> Datsun 710 22.8 4 108 93
m <- data.frame('Value\n1', 'Value\n2')
colnames(m) <- c('Multiline\nCol1', 'Multiline\nCol2')
pandoc.table(m, keep.line.breaks = TRUE, style='simple')
#> Error in tableExpand_cpp(cells, cols.width, justify, sep.cols, style): Pandoc does not support newlines in simple or Rmarkdown table format!grid format is really handy for emacs users
(Emacs table mod) and it
does support block elements (multiple paragraphs, code blocks, lists,
etc.) inside cells, but cells can’t span multiple columns or rows.
Alignments are not supported for grid tables by most parsers, meaning
that even though pander will produce a table with
alignment, it will be lost during conversion from markdown
to HTML/PDF/DOCX.
m <- mtcars[1:3, 1:4]
pandoc.table(m, style = 'grid')
#>
#>
#> +-------------------+------+-----+------+-----+
#> | | mpg | cyl | disp | hp |
#> +===================+======+=====+======+=====+
#> | Mazda RX4 | 21 | 6 | 160 | 110 |
#> +-------------------+------+-----+------+-----+
#> | Mazda RX4 Wag | 21 | 6 | 160 | 110 |
#> +-------------------+------+-----+------+-----+
#> | Datsun 710 | 22.8 | 4 | 108 | 93 |
#> +-------------------+------+-----+------+-----+
m <- data.frame('Value\n1', 'Value\n2')
colnames(m) <- c('Multiline\nCol1', 'Multiline\nCol2')
pandoc.table(m, keep.line.breaks = TRUE, style='grid')
#>
#>
#> +-----------+-----------+
#> | Multiline | Multiline |
#> | Col1 | Col2 |
#> +===========+===========+
#> | Value | Value |
#> | 1 | 2 |
#> +-----------+-----------+rmarkdown or pipe table format, is often used directly
with knitr, since it was supported by the first versions of
the markdown package. It is similar to simple
table in that multiline cells are also not supported. The beginning and
ending pipe characters are optional, but pipes are required between all
columns:
m <- mtcars[1:3, 1:4]
pandoc.table(m, style = 'rmarkdown')
#>
#>
#> | | mpg | cyl | disp | hp |
#> |:-----------------:|:----:|:---:|:----:|:---:|
#> | Mazda RX4 | 21 | 6 | 160 | 110 |
#> | Mazda RX4 Wag | 21 | 6 | 160 | 110 |
#> | Datsun 710 | 22.8 | 4 | 108 | 93 |
m <- data.frame('Value\n1', 'Value\n2')
colnames(m) <- c('Multiline\nCol1', 'Multiline\nCol2')
pandoc.table(m, keep.line.breaks = TRUE, style='rmarkdown')
#> Error in tableExpand_cpp(cells, cols.width, justify, sep.cols, style): Pandoc does not support newlines in simple or Rmarkdown table format!pander allows users to control cell alignment
(left, right or center/centre) in
a table directly by setting the justify parameter when
calling pander/pandoc.table. Note that it is possible to
specify alignment for each column separately by supplying a vector to
justify:
pandoc.table(head(iris[,1:3], 2), justify = 'right')
#>
#> -------------------------------------------
#> Sepal.Length Sepal.Width Petal.Length
#> -------------- ------------- --------------
#> 5.1 3.5 1.4
#>
#> 4.9 3 1.4
#> -------------------------------------------
pandoc.table(head(iris[,1:3], 2), justify = c('right', 'center', 'left'))
#>
#> -------------------------------------------
#> Sepal.Length Sepal.Width Petal.Length
#> -------------- ------------- --------------
#> 5.1 3.5 1.4
#>
#> 4.9 3 1.4
#> -------------------------------------------Another way to define alignment is by using a permanent option
table.alignment.default/table.alignment.rownames in
panderOptions (preferred way) or by using
set.alignment function (legacy way of setting alignment for
next table or permanently) which support setting alignment separately
for cells and rownames:
set.alignment('left', row.names = 'right') # set only for next table since permanent parameter is falce
pandoc.table(mtcars[1:2, 1:5])
#>
#> ---------------------------------------------------
#> mpg cyl disp hp drat
#> ------------------- ----- ----- ------ ----- ------
#> Mazda RX4 21 6 160 110 3.9
#>
#> Mazda RX4 Wag 21 6 160 110 3.9
#> ---------------------------------------------------Interesting application for this functionality is specifying a function that takes the R object as its argument to compute some unique alignment for your table based on e.g. column values or variable types:
panderOptions('table.alignment.default',
function(df)
ifelse(sapply(df, mean) > 2, 'left', 'right'))
pandoc.table(head(iris[,1:3], 2))
#>
#> -------------------------------------------
#> Sepal.Length Sepal.Width Petal.Length
#> -------------- ------------- --------------
#> 5.1 3.5 1.4
#>
#> 4.9 3 1.4
#> -------------------------------------------
panderOptions('table.alignment.default', 'center')One of the great features of pander is the ease of
highlighting rows, columns and cells in a table. This is a native
markdown feature without custom HTML or
LaTeX-only tweaks, so all
HTML/PDF/MS Word/OpenOffice etc. formats are supported.
This can be achieved by specifying one of the arguments below when
calling pander/pandoc.table or change default
style using panderOptions:
The emphasize.italics helpers would turn the affected
cells to italic, emphasize.strong would apply a
bold style to the cell and
emphasize.verbatim would apply a verbatim
style to the cell. A cell can be also italic,
bold and verbatim at the same time.
Those functions and arguments ending in rows or cols take a vector
(like which columns or rows to emphasize in a table), while the cells
argument take either a vector (for one dimensional “tables”) or an
array-like data structure with two columns holding row and column
indexes of cells to be emphasized – just like what
which(..., arr.ind = TRUE) returns:
t <- mtcars[1:3, 1:5]
emphasize.italics.cols(1)
emphasize.italics.rows(1)
emphasize.strong.cells(which(t > 20, arr.ind = TRUE))
pandoc.table(t)
#>
#> ----------------------------------------------------
#> mpg cyl disp hp drat
#> ------------------- ------ ----- ------ ----- ------
#> Mazda RX4 21 6 160 110 3.9
#>
#> Mazda RX4 Wag 21 6 160 110 3.9
#>
#> Datsun 710 22.8 4 108 93 3.85
#> ----------------------------------------------------
pandoc.table(t, emphasize.verbatim.rows = 1, emphasize.strong.cells = which(t > 20, arr.ind = TRUE))
#>
#> ----------------------------------------------------
#> mpg cyl disp hp drat
#> ------------------- ------ ----- ------ ----- ------
#> Mazda RX4 21 6 160 110 3.9
#>
#> Mazda RX4 Wag 21 6 160 110 3.9
#>
#> Datsun 710 22.8 4 108 93 3.85
#> ----------------------------------------------------For more elaborative examples, please see our blog post - Highlight cells in markdown tables.
pander/pandoc.table is able to deal with wide tables.
Ever had an issue in LaTeX or MS Word when
trying to print a correlation matrix of 40 variables? This problem is
carefully addressed with split.table parameter:
pandoc.table(mtcars[1:2, ], style = "grid", caption = "Wide table to be split!")
#>
#>
#> +-------------------+-----+-----+------+-----+------+-------+-------+
#> | | mpg | cyl | disp | hp | drat | wt | qsec |
#> +===================+=====+=====+======+=====+======+=======+=======+
#> | Mazda RX4 | 21 | 6 | 160 | 110 | 3.9 | 2.62 | 16.46 |
#> +-------------------+-----+-----+------+-----+------+-------+-------+
#> | Mazda RX4 Wag | 21 | 6 | 160 | 110 | 3.9 | 2.875 | 17.02 |
#> +-------------------+-----+-----+------+-----+------+-------+-------+
#>
#> Table: Wide table to be split! (continued below)
#>
#>
#>
#> +-------------------+----+----+------+------+
#> | | vs | am | gear | carb |
#> +===================+====+====+======+======+
#> | Mazda RX4 | 0 | 1 | 4 | 4 |
#> +-------------------+----+----+------+------+
#> | Mazda RX4 Wag | 0 | 1 | 4 | 4 |
#> +-------------------+----+----+------+------+split.table defaults to 80 characters and to turn it
off, set split.table to Inf:
pandoc.table(mtcars[1:2, ], style = "grid",
caption = "Wide table to be split!", split.table = Inf)
#>
#>
#> +-------------------+-----+-----+------+-----+------+-------+-------+----+----+------+------+
#> | | mpg | cyl | disp | hp | drat | wt | qsec | vs | am | gear | carb |
#> +===================+=====+=====+======+=====+======+=======+=======+====+====+======+======+
#> | Mazda RX4 | 21 | 6 | 160 | 110 | 3.9 | 2.62 | 16.46 | 0 | 1 | 4 | 4 |
#> +-------------------+-----+-----+------+-----+------+-------+-------+----+----+------+------+
#> | Mazda RX4 Wag | 21 | 6 | 160 | 110 | 3.9 | 2.875 | 17.02 | 0 | 1 | 4 | 4 |
#> +-------------------+-----+-----+------+-----+------+-------+-------+----+----+------+------+
#>
#> Table: Wide table to be split!Also, pander tries to split too wide cells into
multiline cells. The maximum number of characters in a cell is specified
by the split.cells parameter (defaults to 30), which can be
a single value, vector (values for each column separately) and relative
vector (percentages of split.tables parameter). Please not
that this only works for multiline and grid
tables:
df <- data.frame(a = 'Lorem ipsum', b = 'dolor sit', c = 'amet')
pandoc.table(df, split.cells = 5)
#>
#> ----------------------
#> a b c
#> ------- ------- ------
#> Lorem dolor amet
#> ipsum sit
#> ----------------------
pandoc.table(df, split.cells = c(5, 20, 5))
#>
#> --------------------------
#> a b c
#> ------- ----------- ------
#> Lorem dolor sit amet
#> ipsum
#> --------------------------
pandoc.table(df, split.cells = c("80%", "10%", "10%"))
#>
#> ----------------------------
#> a b c
#> ------------- ------- ------
#> Lorem ipsum dolor amet
#> sit
#> ----------------------------
pandoc.table(df, split.cells = 5, style = 'simple')
#>
#>
#> a b c
#> ------------- ----------- ------
#> Lorem ipsum dolor sit ametIn some cases it is also useful to split too long words with hyphens,
and pander uses sylly functionality for that.
Just specify use.hyphening argument and have
sylly installed:
pandoc.table(data.frame(baz = 'foobar', foo='accoutrements'),
use.hyphening = TRUE, split.cells = 3)
#>
#> --------------
#> baz foo
#> ------ -------
#> foo- ac-
#> bar cou-
#> tre-
#> ments
#> --------------pander/pandoc.table deals with formatting numbers by
having 4 parameters:
round to the number of decimal places.digits to specify how many significant digits are to be
used for numericdecimal.mark/big.mark to specify character for decimal
point/orders of magnituderound and digits parameter can be a vector
specifying values for each column (has to be the same length as number
of columns). Values for non-numeric columns will be disregarded.
Now let’s get to some examples:
r <- matrix(c(283764.97430, 29.12345678901, -7.1234, -100.1), ncol = 2)
pandoc.table(r, round = 2)
#>
#> -------- --------
#> 283765 -7.12
#>
#> 29.12 -100.1
#> -------- --------
pandoc.table(r, round = c(4,2)) # vector for each column
#>
#> -------- --------
#> 283765 -7.12
#>
#> 29.12 -100.1
#> -------- --------
pandoc.table(r, digits = 2)
#>
#> -------- ------
#> 283765 -7.1
#>
#> 29 -100
#> -------- ------
pandoc.table(r, digits = c(1, 5)) # vector for each column
#>
#> ------- ---------
#> 3e+05 -7.1234
#>
#> 29 -100.1
#> ------- ---------
pandoc.table(r, big.mark = ',')
#>
#> --------- --------
#> 283,765 -7.123
#>
#> 29.12 -100.1
#> --------- --------
pandoc.table(r, decimal.mark = ',')
#>
#> -------- --------
#> 283765 -7,123
#>
#> 29,12 -100,1
#> -------- --------Functionality described in other sections is most notable, but
pander/pandoc.table also has smaller nifty features that
are worth mentioning:
plain.ascii - allows to have the output without
markdown markup:pandoc.table(mtcars[1:3, 1:4])
#>
#> ---------------------------------------------
#> mpg cyl disp hp
#> ------------------- ------ ----- ------ -----
#> Mazda RX4 21 6 160 110
#>
#> Mazda RX4 Wag 21 6 160 110
#>
#> Datsun 710 22.8 4 108 93
#> ---------------------------------------------
pandoc.table(mtcars[1:3, 1:4], plain.ascii = TRUE)
#>
#> ---------------------------------------------
#> mpg cyl disp hp
#> ------------------- ------ ----- ------ -----
#> Mazda RX4 21 6 160 110
#>
#> Mazda RX4 Wag 21 6 160 110
#>
#> Datsun 710 22.8 4 108 93
#> ---------------------------------------------caption - set caption (string) to be shown under the
table:pandoc.table(mtcars[1:3, 1:5], style = "grid", caption = "My caption!")
#>
#>
#> +-------------------+------+-----+------+-----+------+
#> | | mpg | cyl | disp | hp | drat |
#> +===================+======+=====+======+=====+======+
#> | Mazda RX4 | 21 | 6 | 160 | 110 | 3.9 |
#> +-------------------+------+-----+------+-----+------+
#> | Mazda RX4 Wag | 21 | 6 | 160 | 110 | 3.9 |
#> +-------------------+------+-----+------+-----+------+
#> | Datsun 710 | 22.8 | 4 | 108 | 93 | 3.85 |
#> +-------------------+------+-----+------+-----+------+
#>
#> Table: My caption!missing - set a string to replace missing values:m <- mtcars[1:3, 1:5]
m$mpg <- NA
pandoc.table(m, missing = '?')
#>
#> ---------------------------------------------------
#> mpg cyl disp hp drat
#> ------------------- ----- ----- ------ ----- ------
#> Mazda RX4 ? 6 160 110 3.9
#>
#> Mazda RX4 Wag ? 6 160 110 3.9
#>
#> Datsun 710 ? 4 108 93 3.85
#> ---------------------------------------------------