# In sweave, xtable, only rotate some column names

Lets say i want to make a table in sweave, like this:

<<tab2.1 , results = "asis", echo=FALSE, warning=FALSE>>=
library(xtable)
df <- data.frame(Fish=1:5, Bird=11:15)

rownames(df) <- 2013:2017

print(xtable(df),
rotate.colnames = TRUE)
@


Now, i would like to have the label of the plot in the free space above the years and left of the FishBird, but without rotation. I tried looking in the xtable manual, but it doesnt show how to only rotate some column names.

Here is a workaround. I first put the years into a column, and define my own function to manipulate the column names. This allows me to replace the first column name (in my code example here: rotated[1]) with something else.

library(xtable)
df <- data.frame(rows = 2013:2017, Fish=1:5, Bird=11:15)
# note that the rownames have their own column

print(xtable(df), include.rownames = F,
sanitize.colnames.function = function(x){
rotated <- paste("\\begin{sideways}", x, "\\end{sideways}")
# put all column names into sideways environments for the rotation.
return(c("Need coffee!", paste(rotated[-1], collapse="&")))}
# replaces first column name with something else (not rotated).
)

\begin{table}[ht]
\centering
\begin{tabular}{rrr}
\hline
Need coffee! & \begin{sideways} Fish \end{sideways} &\begin{sideways} Bird \end{sideways} \\
\hline
2013 &   1 &  11 \\
2014 &   2 &  12 \\
2015 &   3 &  13 \\
2016 &   4 &  14 \\
2017 &   5 &  15 \\
\hline
\end{tabular}
\end{table}


Note that you can still have your rownames. The following works just as well:

df <- data.frame(Fish=1:5, Bird=11:15)
rownames(df) <- 2013:2017
print(xtable(tibble::rownames_to_column(df)), include.rownames = F,
sanitize.colnames.function = function(x){
rotated <- paste("\\begin{sideways}", x, "\\end{sideways}")
return(c("Need coffee!", paste(rotated[-1], collapse="&")))}
)

• This works, but would be nice to keep the row.names, as I am using those in my real data. +1, but I will wait with the accept to see if another solution is available using the row.names :) – Jeppe Olsen May 2 '17 at 10:49
• Well, if the problem is that you don't want to change the dataframe, just wrap it into tibble::rownames_to_column when passing to xtable. I have edited my solution to show you how. – coffeinjunky May 2 '17 at 11:02

Another possibility (using my own huxtable package):

library(huxtable)
df <- data.frame(Fish=1:5, Bird=11:15)
rownames(df) <- 2013:2017
number_format(ht) <- 0
rotation(ht)[1, 2:3] <- 90
ht


Another option, if you don't want to deal with LaTeX code directly is to use pixiedust, which lets you choose which columns will be modified.

\documentclass{article}
\usepackage{amssymb}
\usepackage{arydshln}
\usepackage{caption}
\usepackage{graphicx}
\usepackage{hhline}
\usepackage{longtable}
\usepackage{multirow}
\usepackage[dvipsnames,table]{xcolor}
\begin{document}
\SweaveOpts{concordance=TRUE}

<<tab2.1, results = tex>>=
df <- data.frame(Year = 2013:2017, Fish=1:5, Bird=11:15)

library(pixiedust)
options(pixiedust_print_method = "latex") # This option must be set in Rnw files

dust(df) %>%
medley_bw() %>%
sprinkle(cols = c("Fish", "Bird"),
rotate_degree = 90,

• What kind of file are you using? I'm using a .Rnw file in R Studio. – Benjamin May 2 '17 at 10:41
• strange, when I use results = "asis" (as in your example), I get the error Error in match.arg(options\$results, c("verbatim", "tex", "hide")) : 'arg' should be one of "verbatim", "tex", "hide" Try using "asis" and see if that builds for you. – Benjamin May 2 '17 at 10:45