tinytable
is a small but powerful R
package to draw beautiful tables
in a variety of formats: HTML, LaTeX, Word, PDF, PNG, Markdown, and
Typst. The user interface is minimalist and easy to learn, while giving
users access to powerful frameworks to create endlessly customizable
tables.
https://vincentarelbundock.github.io/tinytable/
There are already many excellent table-drawing packages in the R
ecosystem. Why release a new one? As the maintainer of
modelsummary
, I needed a table-drawing
package which was:
- Simple: Streamlined, consistent, and uncluttered user interface, with few functions to learn.
- Flexible: Expressive frameworks to customize tables in HTML and LaTeX formats.[1]
- Zero-dependency: Avoid importing any other
R
package.[2] - Concise: Draw beautiful tables without typing a lot of code.
- Safe: User inputs are checked thoroughly, and informative errors are returned early.
- Maintainable: A small code base which does not rely on too many complex regular expressions.
- Readable: HTML and LaTeX code should be human-readable and editable.
- Free: This package will always be free. Tiny tables for a tiny price!
To achieve these goals, the design philosophy of tinytable
rests on
three pillars:
-
Data is separate from style. The code that this package creates keeps the content of a table separate from the style sheet that applies to its cells. This is in contrast to other
R
packages that modify the actual text in each cell to style it. Keeping data and style separate allowstinytable
to create human-readable files which are easy to edit, debug, and extend. It also enables developers to keep a simpler code base, with minimal use of messy regular expressions. -
Flexibility. Users’ needs are extremely varied, and a table-drawing package must be flexible enough to accomodate different ideas. To achieve this,
tinytable
builds on battle-tested and versatile frameworks likeBootstrap
for HTML andtabularray
for LaTeX. -
Lightweight is the right weight. Some of the most popular table-drawing packages in the
R
ecosystem are very heavy: A singlelibrary()
call can sometimes load upwards of 65R
packages. In contrast,tinytable
imports zero 3rd partyR
package by default.
tinytable
is a relatively new package with rapid development. If you
want to benefit from the latest features—showcased on the package
website—you should install from R-Universe:
install.packages("tinytable", repos = "https://vincentarelbundock.r-universe.dev")
Alternatively, you can install it from CRAN:
install.packages("tinytable")
Restart R
completely for the installation to take effect.
The best feature of tinytable
is its simplicity. To draw a table,
simply call the tt()
function with your data frame as the first
argument:
library(tinytable)
x <- mtcars[1:5, 1:5]
tt(x)
More complex tables can be created by calling arguments and chaining functions together. In the next example, we add a caption, footnote, colors, styles, and spanning column headers:
cap <- "A simple \\texttt{tinytable} example."
not <- "Nullam odio est, ullamcorper scelerisque lectus a, eleifend luctus nisl. Etiam ullamcorper, nibh vel interdum auctor, odio nulla mollis tortor, vel fringilla ante quam quis est."
tt(x,
caption = cap,
notes = not,
width = .5) |>
style_tt(
i = 1:3,
j = 1:2,
background = "teal",
color = "white",
bold = TRUE) |>
group_tt(
j = list("Halloumi" = 1:2, "Tofu" = 4:5))
The tinytable
0.5.0 tutorial will take you much further. It is
available in two formats:
- Tutorial (PDF)
- Tutorial (HTML):
[1] Other formats like Markdown and Typst are also available, but less flexible.
[2] Some extra packages can be imported to access specific
functionality, such as integration with Quarto, inserting ggplot2
objects as inline plots, and saving tables to PNG images or PDF
documents.