Custom Formats
Overview
Quarto format extensions enable you to add new formats to the built-in formats (e.g. html
, pdf
, docx
) already available. Custom formats can provide default document options, style-sheets, header, footer, or logo elements, and even bundle other extensions like filters and shortcodes. They are a great way to provide a common baseline for authoring documents or presentations within an organization, for a particular type of project or analysis, or for a specific publication.
You can specify a custom format beneath the format
key just like a built-in format. For example:
---
title: "My Document"
format:
acm-pdf:
toc: true
---
Custom formats all derive from one of the base formats, and include that base format as a suffix. Formats can also provide multiple variations that derive from distinct base formats. For example:
---
title: "My Document"
toc: true
format:
acm-pdf: default
acm-html: default
---
Note that we moved the toc
option to the top level since it is shared between both of the formats.
Custom formats can also be used with the --to
argument to quarto render
. For example:
Terminal
quarto render document.qmd --to acm-html
Note that if you are specifically interested in using or creating custom formats for journals and manuscripts, you may want to proceed instead to the documentation on Journal Articles.
Quick Start
Here we’ll describe how to create a simple HTML-based format extension. We’ll use the quarto create
command to do this. If you are using VS Code or RStudio you should execute quarto create
within their repsective integrated Terminal panes.
To get started, execute quarto create extension format:html
within the parent directory where you’d like the format to be created:
Terminal
$ quarto create extension format:html
? Extension Name › lexdoc
As shown above, you’ll be prompted for an extension name. Type lexdoc
(a document format for a fictional company named LexCrop) and press Enter—the custom format extension is then created:
Creating extension at /Users/jjallaire/quarto/dev/lexdoc:
- Created README.md
- Created _extensions/lexdoc/custom.scss
- Created _extensions/lexdoc/_extension.yml
- Created template.qmd
If you are running within VS Code or RStudio a new window will open with the extension project.
Note that this example creates a format that is derivative of the Quarto base html
format. You can similarly create formats that are derivative of pdf
, docx
, and revealjs
as follows:
Terminal
quarto create extension format:pdf
quarto create extension format:docx
quarto create extension format:revealjs
Here’s what the contents of the files in _extensions/lexdoc/
look like:
_extensions/lexdoc/_extension.yml
title: Lexdoc
author: J.J. Allaire
version: 1.0.0
quarto-required: ">=1.2.222"
contributes:
formats:
html:
toc: true
theme: [yeti, custom.scss]
The custom HTML format defined here is very simple. It takes the base html
format, turns on the table of contents by default, and sets the theme as yeti
along with a custom.scss
file for additional customizations:
_extensions/lexdoc/custom.css
/*-- scss:defaults --*/
/* TODO: Customize appearance with SCSS variables */
/* See [HTML theme](https://quarto.org/docs/output-formats/html-themes.html#theme-options) */
/*-- scss:rules --*/
/* TODO: Provide custom CSS rules */
Finally, the template.qmd
provides a base example article for users of the format:
template.qmd
---
title: "Lexdoc Example"
format:
lexdoc-html: default
author: J.J. Allaire
date: last-modified
---
## Introduction
*TODO* Create an example file that demonstrates the formatting and features of your format.
## More Information
<https://quarto.org/docs/output-formats/html-basics.html> You can learn more about controlling the appearance of HTML output here:
To develop your format, render/preview template.qmd
, and then make changes to the various files in the _extensions
directory (the preview will automatically refresh when you change these files).
Example: Revealjs
Next, we’ll walk through the creation of a custom format that extends the revealjs
presentation format. Here is what the source code repository of the format extension might look like:
README.md
LICENSE
template.qmd
_extensions/
lexconf/
_extension.yml
theme.scss
logo.png title.png
Note that the format suffix (revealjs
) is excluded from the directory name (this is to account for the possibility of multiple formats e.g. lexconf-revealjs
, lexconf-pptx
, etc.)
As with other types of extensions, the only thing strictly required is the _extensions
directory (anything above that is for your own purposes and is ignored during format installation). Even so, it’s good practice to include a README.md
and LICENSE
file. The template.qmd
file serves a couple of purposes:
- It can be rendered as you develop your format to ensure that things work as expected.
- It can serve as the basis for a format template (which helps users gets started with using your format).
Here is what the contents of _extension.yml
might look like:
title: LexConf 2022 Presentation
author: LexCorp
version: 1.0.0
quarto-required: ">=1.2.0"
contributes:
formats:
revealjs:
theme: [default, theme.scss]
logo: logo.png
footer: |
Copyright 2022 (c) LexCorp, Inc. title-slide-attributes:
data-background-image: title.png
data-background-size: contain
preview-links: auto
This format mostly provides organization-level content and theming. As mentioned above, formats can also include filters which allow for adding custom markdown constructs and rendering behavior.
Here is what the contents of template.qmd
might look like:
---
title: "Presentation"
subtitle: "LexConf 2022"
author: "Your Name"
date: today
format: lexconf-revealjs
---
# Overview
Extension repositories are structured in such a way that you can test your extension and the template by simply rendering the template.qmd
file right in the root of your repository. The template.qmd
will be able to load your extension just as it would when installed, so testing and iterating should be as simple as working within your extension directory until you’re satisfied (without the need to repeatedly install or update the extension in order to test it).
Format Templates
Above we described including a template.qmd
alongside your extension and then installing the template and format together with:
Terminal
quarto use template <gh-organization>/<extension>
The template.qmd
should demonstrate the functionality of the format and serve as a sound starting point for the user. When the extension template is copied into the target directory, the template.qmd
will automatically be renamed to match the name that the user provided for the directory.
You can also include other files alongside template.qmd
and they will be copied as well. Note that by default, Quarto will exclude common Github repository files when copying an extension template. This includes any file name or directory starting with a .
(e.g. .gitignore
), README.md
, LICENSE
, etc.. If you’d like, you can place a .quartoignore
file in the root of your repository with each line of the file being a glob describing file(s) to ignore (using syntax like a .gitignore
file).
Distributing Formats
You can distribute format extensions in one of two ways:
As a template that includes both the format in the
_extensions
directory and thetemplate.qmd
(which is automatically renamed to match the name of the enclosing directory).As a plain format with no template scaffolding (this is useful for adding the format to an existing document or project).
If you have a GitHub repository containing the files enumerated above in the lexconf
example, users could install your extension and associated template as follows (where lexcorp
is the GitHub organization hosting the repo):
Terminal
quarto use template lexcorp/lexconf
This is often the preferred way to get started with a format as it provides the user with a working document right out of the box. It’s also possible to install only the format if you are working with an existing project:
Terminal
quarto add lexcorp/lexconf
Note that it is possible to bundle and distribute extensions as simple gzip archives (as opposed to using a GitHub repository as described above). See the article on Distributing Extensions for additional details.
Multiple Formats
A single format extension can support more than one output format. For example, an extension may target html
and pdf
output. To support multiple formats in your extension, you can add additional base formats to the contributes / format
key like so:
contributes:
format:
html:
# html-specific options
pdf:
# pdf-specific options
Common Metadata
If you have metadata that is common to any output format when your format extension is targeted, you can place that metadata under the common
key. For example:
contributes:
format:
common:
filters:
- filter.lua
shortcodes:
- quarto-ext/fancy-text
html:
# html-specifc
pdf:
# pdf-specifc
Format Resources
You can usually include other files and resources within a format extension by placing those files within the extension directory and using relative paths to reference them in your _extension.yml
metadata file. These relative paths will be properly handled as your extension’s metadata is merged with the rendered document metadata.
If there are resources that you need to have copied to the input directory as a part of rendering the document (for example, a bst
file for LaTeX bibliographies or a logo or other file referenced from a LaTeX template), you can provide format-resources
, which is a list of file paths1. Each of these files will be copied into the directory containing the input that is being rendered when the document is rendered. For example:
contributes:
format:
pdf:
format-resources:
- plos2015.bst
Extension Embedding
In some cases format extensions will want to make use of other extensions. This is permitted, but adding extensions for use within a custom format must be done with a special command line flag to ensure they are embedded correctly.
Terminal
quarto create extension format:pdf myformat
cd myformat
quarto add quarto-ext/fancy-text --embed myformat
For example, here we want to make the fancy-text extension (which provides special formatting for the words \(\LaTeX\) and BibTEX) available for users of the jss custom format:
Terminal
quarto add quarto-ext/fancy-text --embed jss
This will produce the following output:
Output
quarto-journals/jss
└── _extensions
└── jss
├── _extensions
│ └── quarto-ext
│ └── fancy-text
└── partials
This will add the quarto-ext/fancy-text
extension into the jss
extension in the _extensions
folder. By embedding an extension you make it available without creating the potential for conflict with other versions of the extension that users might already have installed.
Footnotes
This is most common in the the case of PDF based formats which have a secondary step of converting the LaTeX produced by Pandoc into a PDF. If there are files that are referenced indirectly by the LaTeX, they will need to be discoverable and should typically be copied into the same directory that contains the LaTeX input.↩︎