Note
It would be fab if someone is willing to port oxforddown
to Quarto ❤️
If you use this template to write your thesis, please cite it! 🥰 (and/or click 'Sponsor' and buy me a coffee... 😉 )
@misc{lyngsOxforddown2019,
author = {Lyngs, Ulrik},
title = {oxforddown: An Oxford University Thesis Template for R Markdown},
year = {2019},
publisher = {GitHub},
journal = {GitHub repository},
howpublished = {\url{https://github.com/ulyngs/oxforddown}},
doi = {10.5281/zenodo.3484681},
}
A template for writing an Oxford University thesis in R Markdown. The template uses the bookdown R package together with the OxThesis LaTeX template, plus lots of inspiration from thesisdown.
Examples of theses written with oxforddown
(see also Google Scholar):
- Ulysses in Cyberspace: Examining the Effectiveness of Design Patterns for Digital Self-Control by Ulrik Lyngs
- The impact of heat on occupational injuries, illnesses and associated economic costs in Australia by Matthew Anthony Borg
- The Psychology of Managerial Capital Allocation by Shir Dekel
- Teens, Screens and Wellbeing: An Improved Approach by Amy Orben
- Interpreting Neural Language Models for Linguistic Complexity Assessment by Gabriele Sarti
- Modeling of nutrient dynamics in an urbanized tropical estuary and application to eutrophication risk management by Nguyen Truong An
NOTE: If you've used this template to write your thesis, drop me a line at ulrik.lyngs@cs.ox.ac.uk and I'll add a link showcasing it!
-
The R packages
rmarkdown
,bookdown
,tidyverse
,kableExtra
, andhere
-
a LaTeX installation
-
Option 1: Use TinyTeX (a minimal LaTeX installation intended for use with R Markdown)
- the development version of TinyTex is currently required. Install from R with
remotes::install_github('yihui/tinytex') tinytex::install_tinytex()
- Then install the LaTeX packages used by
oxforddown
(diskspace taken up by TinyTex with the required packages installed is about 280 Mb)
missing_packages <- c( "appendix", "babel-english", "babel-greek", "babel-latin", "biber", "biblatex", "caption", "cbfonts-fd", "colortbl", "csquotes", "enumitem", "environ", "eso-pic", "fancyhdr", "greek-fontenc", "grfext", "hyphen-greek", "hyphen-latin", "lineno", "logreq", "makecell", "microtype", "minitoc", "multirow", "notoccite", "oberdiek", "pdflscape", "pdfpages", "quotchap", "soul", "tabu", "threeparttable", "threeparttablex", "titlesec", "tocbibind", "trimspaces", "ulem", "units", "utopia", "varwidth", "wrapfig", "fvextra", "xurl" ) tinytex::tlmgr_install(missing_packages)
-
Option 2: Use an ordinary LaTeX distribution
- Mac: download and install MacTeX from tug.org/mactex/ (~4 gigs)
- Windows: download and install MikTex from miktex.org
-
-
If on Mac
- Command line developer tools. If you haven't got these installed already, your mac will probably automatically prompt you to install them. Otherwise, you can install them by opening a terminal and typing
xcode-select --install
- Command line developer tools. If you haven't got these installed already, your mac will probably automatically prompt you to install them. Otherwise, you can install them by opening a terminal and typing
- download the ulyngs/oxforddown repo as a zip
- open oxforddown.Rproj in RStudio
Read the 'How to use' chapter to understand the structure of oxforddown
and how to do the basic things like building your thesis.
Note: bibliography files cannot have underscores in their names!
For how to use R Markdown syntax in general and in oxforddown
in particular, read the dedicated chapters on this (R Markdown basics, Citations, cross-references, and collaboration, and Tables).
See also the general, official R Markdown resources R Markdown: The Definitive Guide and the R Markdown Cookbook.
I am in the process of updating the tutorial videos to v3 - I've noted below which have yet to be updated, but are still informative, and struck out those that no longer apply:
- Part 1: Building the entire thesis
- Part 2: Building a single chapter
- (old but informative) Part 3: Understanding the file structure
- (old but informative) Part 4: A walk-through example of creating your thesis
Part 5: The content included in index.Rmd (or: why the introduction chapter is special)- (old but informative) Part 6: Adjusting the order of chapters
- (old but informative) Part 7: _bookdown.yml: Adjusting build settings
Part 8: Makefile: Adjusting build settings- (old but informative) Part 9: The LaTeX templates
- update the YAML header (the stuff at the top between '---') in index.Rmd with your name, college, etc.
- write the individual chapters as .Rmd files in the root folder
- write the front matter (abstract, acknowledgements, abbreviations) and back matter (appendices) by adjusting the .Rmd files in the front-and-back-matter/ folder
.Rmd files you don't want included in the body text must be given file names that begin with an underscore (e.g. front-and-back-matter/_abstract.Rmd and front-and-back-matter/_acknowledgements.Rmd). (Alternatively, specify manually in _bookdown.yml which files should be merged into the body text.)
- Build the entire thesis by opening index.Rmd and clicking the 'knit' button.
- The generated thesis files are saved in the docs/ folder
- To choose output formats, go to the top of index.Rmd's YAML header and edit the line
thesis_formats <- "pdf";
to the format(s) you want (options are "pdf", "bs4", "gitbook", and "word") - You can build to multiple formats simultaneously with, e.g.,
thesis_formats <- c("pdf", "bs4", "word")
- If you want to customise the build function, edit scripts_and_filters/knit-functions.R
knit: (function(input, ...) {
thesis_formats <- "pdf";
...
When you build the entire thesis to PDF, Latex generates a whole bunch of auxillary files - these are automatically removed after the build process end by the custom knit function that is used when you knit index.Rmd.
To change how this removal is done, edit scripts_and_filters/knit-functions.R.
The line file.remove(list.files(pattern = "*\\.(log|mtc\\d*|maf|aux|bcf|lof|lot|out|toc)$"))
within if ("pdf" %in% output_format){
is the one that removes files after PDF output is generated.
knit: (function(input, ...) {
thesis_formats <- "bs4";
...
- NOTE: the bs4 book output requires the
downlit
andbslib
R packages (install them withinstall.packages
) - Note also that to deploy a BS4 book on GitHub Pages, there must be a .nojekyll file in the docs/ folder, otherwise GitHub does some voodoo that causes some filepaths not to work. This file is generated automatically by
oxforddown
's knitting function.
knit: (function(input, ...) {
thesis_formats <- "gitbook";
...
- Note that to deploy a gitbook on GitHub Pages, there must be a .nojekyll file in the docs/ folder, otherwise GitHub does some voodoo that causes some filepaths not to work. This file is generated automatically by
oxforddown
's knitting function.
knit: (function(input, ...) {
thesis_formats <- "word";
...
- Note that the Word output has no templates behind it, and many things do not work (e.g. image rotation, highlighting corrections). I encourage pull requests that optimise the Word output, e.g. by using tools from the
officer
package.
To knit an individual chapter without compiling the entire thesis:
- open the .Rmd file of a chapter
- add a YAML header specifying the output format(s) (e.g.
bookdown::word_document2
for a word document you might want to upload to Google Docs for feedback from collaborators) - click the
knit
button (the output file is then saved in the root folder)
As shown in the sample chapters' YAML headers, to output a single chapter to PDF, use e.g.:
output:
bookdown::pdf_document2:
template: templates/brief_template.tex
citation_package: biblatex
documentclass: book
bibliography: references.bib
The file templates/brief_template.tex formats the chapter in the OxThesis style but without including the front matter (table of contents, abstract, etc).
NOTE: The bibliography path in your individual chapters' YAML headers needs to be identical to the one in index.Rmd - otherwise your individual chapters' bibliography path may override the path in index.Rmd and cause trouble when you knit the entire thesis.
- for common things you might want to do in your thesis, read through the sample content
- the 'Customisations and extensions' chapter (thanks @bmvandoren!) has tips on how to include PDF pages from a published typeset article in your thesis, and much more!
-
don't use underscores (_) in your YAML front matter or code chunk labels! (underscores have special meaning in LaTeX, so therefore you are likely to get an error, cf. https://yihui.org/en/2018/03/space-pain/)
- bad YAML:
bibliography: bib_final.bib
- good YAML:
bibliography: bib-final.bib
- bad chunk label:
{r my_plot}
- good chunk label:
{r my-plot}
- bad YAML:
- at the moment only PDF and HTML output have been properly implemented; I may improve on the Word output further down the line
Enjoy!