Best Practice for newline in LaTeX table

Since many people have asked me this question (#157, this SO question, etc.), I feel like I should document it out. :)

Wrapping texts and make newlines may seem to be the same but they are actaully quite different. Thinking about when you "wrap texts" in your text editor, you have a fixed width window and the texts will be automatically wrapped. It's like a passive skill (in games :P). However, when you are trying to make newlines, you are inserting the linebreak by yourself and it's mostly like an active skill you need to cast. For these two tasks, LaTeX provides two totally different approaches.

Text wrapping

If you are only trying stop your texts from "overflowing", you can get it done by setting a fixed width with kableExtra::column_spec. This is the most recommanded practice as it's fairly straightforward. The column width controls the width for both table header and table body.

library(kableExtra)
dt <- data.frame(
  Items = c("Item 1", "Item 2", "Item 3"),
  Text_1 = c("Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Proin vehicula tempor ex. Morbi malesuada sagittis turpis, at venenatis nisl luctus a. ","In eu urna at magna luctus rhoncus quis in nisl. Fusce in velit varius, posuere risus et, cursus augue. Duis eleifend aliquam ante, a aliquet ex tincidunt in. ", "Vivamus venenatis egestas eros ut tempus. Vivamus id est nisi. Aliquam molestie erat et sollicitudin venenatis. In ac lacus at velit scelerisque mattis. "),
  Text_2 = c("Duis posuere placerat magna, ac aliquam lorem viverra non. Ut ultrices tempus eros, quis sodales libero commodo non. In non neque ut lacus vestibulum dictum a quis ipsum. ", "Aenean ut justo interdum, laoreet enim nec, viverra eros. Donec vel pharetra nunc. Suspendisse vel ipsum ac lectus semper aliquam ac a orci. Suspendisse libero mauris, egestas semper auctor sit amet, tempor et orci. ", "Phasellus quis neque aliquet, finibus nunc eget, lacinia neque. Sed auctor lectus vel ex scelerisque commodo. ")
)
kable(dt, "latex", booktabs = T, 
      col.names = c("Item", "Short Title", "Very Very Very Very Very Very Long Title")) %>%
  column_spec(2:3, width = "5cm")

Insert linebreak in table

In LaTeX, to make linebreaks in table cells, people usually use the makecell package. kableExtra 0.8.0 comes with a function called linebreak to facilitate that. Basically, this function will scan the existance of \n. If \n exists, it will put the texts in a makecell statement. It works in a very similar way with cell_spec so you will need to put escape = F in kable.

linebreak("a\nb")

When you have \n in your data frame, you can either change the value manually or simply use it with mutate_all.

dt2 <- data.frame(
  Item = c("Hello\nWorld", "This\nis a cat"), 
  Value = c(10, 100)
) 
dt2$Item <- linebreak(dt2$Item)

dt2 %>%
  kable("latex", booktabs = T, escape = F,
        caption = "Main Title\\\\Subtitle",
        col.names = linebreak(c("Item\n(Name)", "Value\n(Number)"), align = "c"))

Note that linebreaks in table captions should be treated in a different way. You will need to insert the linebreak (\\\\) by yourself manually, which is easier than using linebreak. linebreak doesn't work because it put things in a makecell, which doesn't work in caption (as it's not a cell :P). At the same time, if you are using kableExtra 0.9.0 or any previous version, you need to load the caption package in LaTeX by yourself.

header-includes:
  - \usepackage{caption}

Linebreak in other kableExtra functions

If you have a need to put a linebreak in kableExtra functions such as add_header_above and pack_rows, just go ahead and use \n directly (in kableExtra >= 0.8.0) and it will be automatically converted. Note that this feature is also controlled by the escape option in those functions.

dt2 %>%
  kable("latex", booktabs = T, escape = F,
        col.names = linebreak(c("Item\n(Name)", "Value\n(Number)"), align = "c")) %>%
  add_header_above(c("Combined\nTitle" = 2)) %>%
  pack_rows("Group\n1", 2, 2)


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kableExtra documentation built on Feb. 20, 2021, 9:10 a.m.