By default, a gt table does not have row striping enabled. However, this function allows us to easily enable or disable striped rows in the table body. This function serves as a convenient shortcut for <gt_tbl> %>% tab_options(row.striping.include_table_body = TRUE|FALSE).

opt_row_striping(data, row_striping = TRUE)

Arguments

data

A table object that is created using the gt() function.

row_striping

A logical value to indicate whether row striping should be added or removed.

Value

An object of class gt_tbl.

Figures

Function ID

9-2

See also

Examples

# Use `exibble` to create a gt table with # a number of table parts added; next, we # add row striping to every second row with # the `opt_row_striping()` function tab_1 <- exibble %>% gt(rowname_col = "row", groupname_col = "group") %>% summary_rows( groups = "grp_a", columns = c(num, currency), fns = list( min = ~min(., na.rm = TRUE), max = ~max(., na.rm = TRUE) )) %>% grand_summary_rows( columns = currency, fns = list( total = ~sum(., na.rm = TRUE) )) %>% tab_source_note(source_note = "This is a source note.") %>% tab_footnote( footnote = "This is a footnote.", locations = cells_body(columns = 1, rows = 1) ) %>% tab_header( title = "The title of the table", subtitle = "The table's subtitle" ) %>% opt_row_striping()