Ändra stilattribut för textelement
Med CSS är det enkelt att ändra utseendet på text i din rapport. I den här övningen ska du byta typsnitt till ett serif-typsnitt, i linje med stilen i dina diagram. Du ska även prova några andra CSS-selektorer för att ändra färger och teckenstorlekar i rapporten. Till exempel är teckenstorleken på R-kodelementen för närvarande lite väl stor i förhållande till den omgivande brödtexten. Du använder CSS för att minska den storleken.
All din CSS ska placeras inuti <style>-taggarna ovanför sammanfattningen. I nästa övning lär du dig hur du refererar till en extern CSS-fil via YAML-headern. Om du behöver mer hjälp med textstilsättning kan du läsa Mozillas Developer-referens.
Den här övningen är en del av kursen
Kommunicera med data i Tidyverse
Övningsinstruktioner
- På rad 17: ändra
font-familyför all text i rapporten (inklusive rubriker, men inte R-kodblock) till"Bookman", serif. - På rad 21: ändra färgen på brödtexten till en lätt grå ton (
#333333). - På rad 24: ändra färgen på alla länkar till
red. - På rad 27: minska teckenstorleken på R-kodelementen, som är inlindade i
pre-HTML-taggar, till10px.
Interaktiv övning med praktiskt arbete
Testa den här övningen genom att slutföra den här exempelkoden.
{"my_document.Rmd":"---\ntitle: \"The reduction in weekly working hours in Europe\" \nsubtitle: \"Looking at the development between 1996 and 2006\"\nauthor: \"Insert your name here\"\noutput: \n html_document:\n theme: cosmo\n highlight: monochrome\n toc: true\n toc_float: false\n toc_depth: 4\n code_folding: hide\n---\n\n\n\n## Summary \n\nThe **International Labour Organization (ILO)** has many [data sets](http://www.ilo.org/global/statistics-and-databases/lang--en/index.htm) on working conditions. For example, one can look at how weekly working hours have been decreasing in many countries of the world, while monetary compensation has risen. In this report, *the reduction in weekly working hours* in European countries is analysed, and a comparison between 1996 and 2006 is made. All analysed countries have seen a decrease in weekly working hours since 1996 – some more than others.\n\n## Preparations \n\n```{r loading_packages, message = FALSE}\nlibrary(dplyr)\nlibrary(ggplot2)\nlibrary(forcats)\n```\n\n## Analysis\n\n### Data\n\nThe herein used data can be found in the [statistics database of the ILO](http://www.ilo.org/ilostat/faces/wcnav_defaultSelection;ILOSTATCOOKIE=ZOm2Lqrr-OIuzxNGn2_08bNe9AmHQ1kUA6FydqyZJeIudFLb2Yz5!1845546174?_afrLoop=32158017365146&_afrWindowMode=0&_afrWindowId=null#!%40%40%3F_afrWindowId%3Dnull%26_afrLoop%3D32158017365146%26_afrWindowMode%3D0%26_adf.ctrl-state%3D4cwaylvi8_4). For the purpose of this course, it has been slightly preprocessed.\n\n```{r loading_data}\nload(url(\"http://s3.amazonaws.com/assets.datacamp.com/production/course_5807/datasets/ilo_data.RData\"))\n```\n\nThe loaded data contains `r ilo_data %>% count()` rows. \n\n```{r generating_summary_statistics, echo = TRUE}\n# Some summary statistics\nilo_data %>%\n group_by(year) %>%\n summarize(mean_hourly_compensation = mean(hourly_compensation),\n mean_working_hours = mean(working_hours))\n\n```\n\nAs can be seen from the above table, the average weekly working hours of European countries have been descreasing since 1980.\n\n### Preprocessing\n\nThe data is now filtered so it only contains the years 1996 and 2006 – a good time range for comparison. \n\n```{r}\nilo_data <- ilo_data %>%\n filter(year == \"1996\" | year == \"2006\")\n \n# Reorder country factor levels\nilo_data <- ilo_data %>%\n # Arrange data frame first, so last is always 2006\n arrange(year) %>%\n # Use the fct_reorder function inside mutate to reorder countries by working hours in 2006\n mutate(country = fct_reorder(country,\n working_hours,\n last))\n``` \n\n### Results\n\nIn the following, a plot that shows the reduction of weekly working hours from 1996 to 2006 in each country is produced.\n\nFirst, a custom theme is defined.\n\n```{r defining_a_theme, echo = FALSE}\n# Better to define your own function than to always type the same stuff\ntheme_ilo <- function(){\n theme_minimal() +\n theme(\n text = element_text(family = \"Bookman\", color = \"gray25\"),\n plot.subtitle = element_text(size = 12),\n plot.caption = element_text(color = \"gray30\"),\n plot.background = element_rect(fill = \"gray95\"),\n plot.margin = unit(c(5, 10, 5, 10), units = \"mm\")\n )\n}\n``` \n\nThen, the plot is produced. \n\n```{r fig.height = 8, fig.width = 4.5, fig.align = \"center\"}\n# Compute temporary data set for optimal label placement\nmedian_working_hours <- ilo_data %>%\n group_by(country) %>%\n summarize(median_working_hours_per_country = median(working_hours)) %>%\n ungroup()\n\n# Have a look at the structure of this data set\nstr(median_working_hours)\n\n# Plot\nggplot(ilo_data) +\n geom_path(aes(x = working_hours, y = country),\n arrow = arrow(length = unit(1.5, \"mm\"), type = \"closed\")) +\n # Add labels for values (both 1996 and 2006)\n geom_text(\n aes(x = working_hours,\n y = country,\n label = round(working_hours, 1),\n hjust = ifelse(year == \"2006\", 1.4, -0.4)\n ),\n # Change the appearance of the text\n size = 3,\n family = \"Bookman\",\n color = \"gray25\"\n ) +\n # Add labels for country\n geom_text(data = median_working_hours,\n aes(y = country,\n x = median_working_hours_per_country,\n label = country),\n vjust = 2,\n family = \"Bookman\",\n color = \"gray25\") +\n # Add titles\n labs(\n title = \"People work less in 2006 compared to 1996\",\n subtitle = \"Working hours in European countries, development since 1996\",\n caption = \"Data source: ILO, 2017\"\n ) +\n # Apply your theme \n theme_ilo() +\n # Remove axes and grids\n theme(\n axis.ticks = element_blank(),\n axis.title = element_blank(),\n axis.text = element_blank(),\n panel.grid = element_blank(),\n # Also, let's reduce the font size of the subtitle\n plot.subtitle = element_text(size = 9)\n ) +\n # Reset coordinate system\n coord_cartesian(xlim = c(25, 41))\n```\n\n#### An interesting correlation\n\nThe results of another analysis are shown here, even though they cannot be reproduced with the data at hand.\n\n\n\nAs you can see, there's also an interesting relationship. The more people work, the less compensation they seem to receive, which seems kind of unfair. This is quite possibly related to other proxy variables like overall economic stability and performance of a country.\n\n\n"}