% Generated by roxygen2: do not edit by hand % Please edit documentation in R/hrbrthemes-package.R \docType{package} \name{hrbrthemes} \alias{hrbrthemes} \alias{hrbrthemes-package} \title{Additional Themes and Theme Components for 'ggplot2'} \description{ A compilation of extra themes and theme components for 'ggplot2' with an emphasis on typography. } \details{ The core theme: \code{theme_ipsum} ("ipsum" is Latin for "precise") uses Arial Narrow which should be installed on practically any modern system, so it's "free"-ish. This font is condensed, has solid default kerning pairs and geometric numbers. That's what I consider the "font trifecta" must-have for charts. An additional quality for fonts for charts is that they have a diversity of weights. Arial Narrow (the one on most systems, anyway) does not have said diversity but this quality is not (IMO) a "must have". There is an option \code{hrbrthemes.loadfonts} which -- if set to \code{TRUE} -- will call \code{extrafont::loadfonts()} to register non-core fonts with R PDF & PostScript devices. If you are running under Windows, the package calls the same function to register non-core fonts with the Windows graphics device. } \seealso{ Useful links: \itemize{ \item \url{http://github.com/hrbrmstr/hrbrthemes} \item Report bugs at \url{https://github.com/hrbrmstr/hrbrthemes/issues} } } \author{ Bob Rudis (bob@rud.is) } \keyword{internal}