Yihui/Jeff, I'm trying to determine where the default CSS file is located as I don't see this in any of the documentation. I can definitely find a markdwon.css file in C:\Program Files\RStudio\resources
I also see an R.css file in that directory. I also have R.css in C:\Users\jeffjohn\Dropbox\R\Rlibs\rstudio\html which is where I have all of my packages installed. Would you know how I can determine what CSS file a given .Rmd file is referencing? However, I've tried making a simple change to each of them (first backing them up of course) by changing the h1 to small instead of x-large and saving the doc, but when I knit the document it does not change anything. Any guidance you can provide would be extremely helpful. Again, I'm using R-Studio on Windows. On Thu, Jan 30, 2014 at 3:54 PM, Jeff Johnson <mrjeffto...@gmail.com> wrote: > Thanks Yihui and Jeff. > > I've retrieved the default CSS file and made a tweak to it (changing a > header 1 size just to test it) and saved it to the same local directory as > my .Rmd file using the name 'mymarkdown.css' for testing. > > I've added: > options(rstudio.markdownToHTML = > function(inputFile, outputFile) { > require(markdown) > markdownToHTML(inputFile, outputFile, stylesheet='mymarkdown.css') > } > ) > > to the top of my testfile.Rmd file so that my file now looks like: > > options(rstudio.markdownToHTML = > function(inputFile, outputFile) { > require(markdown) > markdownToHTML(inputFile, outputFile, stylesheet='mymarkdown.css') > } > ) > > Title > ======================================================== > > This is an R Markdown document. Markdown is a simple formatting syntax for > authoring web pages (click the **Help** toolbar button for more details on > using R Markdown). > > When you click the **Knit HTML** button a web page 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} > summary(cars) > ``` > > But when I knit it, it just writes the "options" chunk at the top of my > document. Am I supposed to add something else to get the .rmd file to > reference the css? > > I'm quite new to programming and R (as if you couldn't tell!), so not sure > what additional steps I need to add. > > Thanks much. > Jeff > > > > On Thu, Jan 30, 2014 at 1:48 PM, Yihui Xie <x...@yihui.name> wrote: > >> Exactly. Please see RStudio documentation: >> >> https://support.rstudio.com/hc/en-us/articles/200552186-Customizing-Markdown-Rendering >> >> Regards, >> Yihui >> -- >> Yihui Xie <xieyi...@gmail.com> >> Web: http://yihui.name >> >> >> On Thu, Jan 30, 2014 at 10:57 AM, Jeff Newmiller >> <jdnew...@dcn.davis.ca.us> wrote: >> > This sounds like a classic "you need to write a custom CSS file" >> problem... Which is off-topic here, so is homework for you. >> > >> > On January 30, 2014 8:34:32 AM PST, Jeff Johnson <mrjeffto...@gmail.com> >> wrote: >> >>Hi Yihui, >> >> >> >>The package I have installed is "knitr". To generate the HTML, I run >> >>Knit >> >>HTML from within R Studio version .98.490 (there's an icon to initiate >> >>it. >> >> >> .... >> >> >> >>You can load that dataset, then: >> >>Print the column names >> >>```{r, echo=showcode, comment=commentchar} >> >>colnames(mydf) >> >>``` >> >>The resulting font is a couple of points larger than I'd like. I'd like >> >>to >> >>be able to control this either globally or at the code chunk level. >> >> >> >>Thanks for your help with this! >> > > > > -- > Jeff > -- Jeff [[alternative HTML version deleted]] ______________________________________________ R-help@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.