This is a repackaging of the google io 2012 slidedeck, with some modifications, to be a little easier to use and more suitable for scientific presentations.
We've made a few changes:
- You edit and author your entire presentation in markdown.
- All the metadata about your project is set within the markdown file, including things like the title and author.
- It's packaged as a python project.
- You run
slidedeck create
to make a new deck. This will create a new directory with your project. In particular, there will be a fine in there calledslides.md
that contains the markdown source for your slides. slidedeck render
will render your deck from markdown to html5.slidedeck watch
will watch your project and rerender the slides whenever you change the content (useful for iterative development).
- You run
- I made a few stylistic changes to the css, including changing the font size.
- The slides can contain LaTeX, which is rendered via mathjax.
- There are no google logos all over the place
slidedeck
can be installed with pip
.
$ pip install slidedeck
Create a new project, complete with some template slides, the css, and the javascript.
$ slidedeck create my_slides
Look in there for the slides.md
file, and edit it to your liking. When you want to see
your work, compile the slides from markdown into HTML.
$ slidedeck render
You can also have the HTML auto-compiled from markdown, any time the files change on disk.
$ slidedeck watch
If you're curious about how any of these commands work, pass the -h
flag to the command
line executable,
$ slidedeck -h
$ slidedeck create -h
slidedeck watch
works nicely with the tincr extension for
chrome, which will refresh your browser every time the html files its serving
are changed on disk.
If you have internet access, you can add a molecule to your slides by using
<script type="text/javascript" src="http://chemapps.stolaf.edu/jmol/jmol.php?pdbid=1A9U&inline&script=cartoon only"></script>
more options are explained here.
For an offline version, you need a local copy of JSmol.min.js, and j2s (see the JSmol wiki).
Then add the following to the header of base.html
<script type="text/javascript" src="JSmol.min.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
var Info = {
height: 500,
width: 500,
use: "HTML5"
};
</script>
And insert
<script type="text/javascript">
jmolApplet0 = Jmol.getApplet("jmolApplet0", Info);
Jmol.script(jmolApplet0,"background white; load 1A9U.pdb; cartoon only;")
</script>
in the slide where you want the molecule to appear.
Below are some examples of slides using this deck.
https://rawgit.com/kyleabeauchamp/BPS2015/master/index.html
https://rawgit.com/kyleabeauchamp/DefenseSlides/master/index.html
http://rawgit.com/kyleabeauchamp/MSMBuilderTalk/master/index.html
DO WHAT THE FUCK YOU WANT TO PUBLIC LICENSE
Version 2, December 2004
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copies of this license document, and changing it is allowed as long
as the name is changed.
DO WHAT THE FUCK YOU WANT TO PUBLIC LICENSE
TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR COPYING, DISTRIBUTION AND MODIFICATION
0. You just DO WHAT THE FUCK YOU WANT TO.