The (html and pdf) styles provided by the tufte package make it very easy and convenient to create documents in the celebrated style of Edward Tufte.
The clear layout, focused use of white space and unparalleled use of the margin for complementary information, including graphs, offer a novel and very valuable resource for typesetting.
Yet at the same time, not everybody is a fan of the yellow tint, and the fonts. I had been looking for a while for an alternative, and came across envisioned css by Jef Lippiat. It gets a few things very right: use of the beautiful Roboto Condensed font along with a closer-to-white background. So I mixed this with the code framework provided by JJ and Yihui to make it an RMarkdown template you can use just by installing this package. Among the small changes I made were the removal of italics in subheaders and the title.
Similarly, LaTeX styles exists and the tufte package supports both pdf handouts and a book format. We first supported the pdf handout output only, and added support for a pdf book format in release 0.1.0.
A quick screenshot of the html variant is below:
and the full underlying document is available too. Its sources are included in the packages as html/skeleton.Rmd.
Another screenshot shows the pdf handout variant:
and its underlying sources are included as pdf/skeleton.Rmd.
Here is a screenshot of the book format (which was added with release 0.1.0), showing a chapter-opening page on the left:
Since release 0.1.1 additional fonts can be specified in the YAML header. Using the following lines in the YAML header
latexfonts:
- package: newtxmath
options:
- cmintegrals
- cmbraces
- package: ebgaramond-maths
- package: nimbusmononarrow
yields output as in the following screenshot of the first two vignette pages:
A second example is using
latexfonts:
- package: lato
options: default
- package: FiraMono
linkcolor: "0.3,0.3,0.6"
which also show the linkcolor
option resulting in
The package is now on CRAN and
supports both pdf and html output for handouts, as well as pdf format for
book-length documents. This latter style can be used with rmarkdown
or
bookdown
.
Install from CRAN as any other package via
R> install.packages("tint")
and then use as a Markdown template via RStudio, or call rmarkdown::render()
directly.
We have also used the book-length format via bookdown::render_book()
.
Beyond the R package dependencies, a working pandoc
binary is needed. RStudio installs
its own copy, otherwise do what is needed on your OS (i.e., something like sudo apt-get install pandoc pandoc-citeproc
).
The pdf mode requires a fairly complete LaTeX installation. On Debian/Ubuntu, the following packages should provide a working set:
texlive-base
texlive-binaries
texlive-fonts-extra
texlive-fonts-recommended
texlive-generic-recommended
texlive-humanities
texlive-latex-base
texlive-latex-extra
texlive-latex-recommended
texlive-pictures
- binb: Binb is not Beamer: Stylish pdf Presentations from RMarkdown
- linl: Linl is not Letter: LaTeX letters from RMarkdown
- pinp: Pinp is not PNAS: Snazzy one-or two column short papers or vignettes
and the minm package installing all of them.
Gwern Branwen has a wide-ranging overview of sidenotes in web design.
Dirk Eddelbuettel and Jonathan Gilligan, borrowing heavily from JJ and Yihui in tufte, Dave Liepman in the underlying tufte-css, Jef Lippiat in envisioned css and also relying on the work of the Tufte-LaTeX authors.
GPL-3 for our parts and the code from tufte, mostly MIT for what comes from Dave Liepman and Jef Lippiat.