thesis obectives
Tomasz Mazur
Oxford University
July 9, 2009
Outline
Introduction
What is this?
Creating presentation overview
Modifying themes, colours and fonts
Adding things
Adding new slides
Table of contents
Using boxes and images
Overlays
What else is possible
Making most of the Beamer class
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Introduction
Creating presentations using L
A
T
E
X is straightforward...
...with Beamer, a class for creating slides
should be already installed with most L
A
T
E
X distributions, but can
be obtained from http://latex-beamer.sourceforge.net/
Beamer documentation available from
http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/macros/latex/
contrib/beamer/doc/beameruserguide.pdf
This is a modication of Marco Barisions Torino theme
It aims to produce slides that are pretty, but easily readable and
with large content area
Most of standard Beamer commands are supported
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Creating your presentation
You can simply modify this le
Set the conguration options at the top of the document for
colours
fonts
title page style
logos
bullet points shapes, etc.
Compile using pdflatex (recommended), but latex works too
Due to format restrictions, graphics may be slightly misaligned in
PS les, use PDF instead
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Themes and colours
There are four basic colour themes:
minimal (least eye-candy, good for longer presentations)
greenandblue
blue (good for low quality projectors)
red (American-style)
Themes dene the colours of the background, slide decorations,
slide titles, main text, bullet points, etc.
Edit themes by modifying the beamercolortheme*.sty le
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Fonts
There are ve font themes:
default (sans serif)
serif (used for this presentation)
structurebold (titles, headlines, etc. are typeset in a bold font)
structureitalicserif (titles, headlines, etc. are typeset in an
italics serif font)
structuresmallcapsserif (titles, headlines, etc. are typeset in a
small caps serif font)
Change the document-wise font size to 8, 9 , 10, 11 (default), 12,
14, 17 or 20 points in the options of \documentclass, e.g.
\documentclass[12pt]{beamer}
Colour text using \textcolor{<<colour>>}{<<text>>}
The \alert{<<text>>} command colours text red
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Adding slides (1)
...with subheadings
A slide is created using the following code:
\begin{frame}[<<options>>]
\frametitle{<<slide title>>}
<<contents>>
\end{frame}
The possible options include:
plain removes all slide decorations (useful for larger images)
c and b align contents of the slide in the middle or bottom (default
alignment is top, but this can easily be changed in the document class
options)
fragile is necessary for slides that use the verbatim
shrink automagically makes the contents t on one slide
allowframebrakes splits contents of a frame if it does not t
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Adding slides (2)
...with subheadings
The \framesubtitle creates a secondary slide title
The rst slide is best created using the
\begin{frame}[plain] \titlepage \end{frame}
commands.
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We are here now...
Introduction
Modifying themes, colours and fonts
Adding things
Overlays
What else is possible
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...in fact, even here
Introduction
What is this?
Creating presentation overview
Modifying themes, colours and fonts
Adding things
Adding new slides
Table of contents
Using boxes and images
Overlays
What else is possible
Making most of the Beamer class
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Table of contents
Create outlines using \tableofcontents[<<options>>]
The possible options include:
currentsection (all sections but current are greyed out)
currentsubsection (all subsections but current are greyed out)
hideallsubsections (all subsections are hidden)
hideothersubsections (all subsections of sections other than the
current are hidden)
pausesections (shows the table of contents incrementally)
pausesubsections (ner increments than \pausesections)
sections={<2-3>} (only sections 2 and 3 are displayed)
sectionstyle=<<1>>/<<2>> (dene style of current section
(<<1>>), other sections (<<2>>) using show, shaded and hide, e.g.
sectionstyle=shaded/show)
subsectionstyle=<1>/<2>/<3> (dene style for current subsection
(<<1>>), other subsections in current section (<<2>>), subsections in
other sections (<<3>>))
The commands \section, \subsection, etc. make a structure
for tables of contents (outlines are independent of slide titles)
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Boxes
Use the \begin{<<env>>} ... \end{<<env>>} command for
predened environments (e.g. definition, theorem, proof,
example, corollary, etc.) - not too pretty
Alternatively, use fancy boxes
Use the columns environments for multiple columns
Theorem
If P, then Q.
Theorem
If P, then Q.
Example
Consider P = ...
Proof
Suppose that P holds...
Corollary
Q holds
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Including images
Include images using the standard figure environment
Beamer supports \includegraphics, \pgfimage, \pgfuseimage
and more
Figure: Oxford University logo
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Simple overlays
Use \begin{itemize} \item<x-> \end{itemize} to display
bullet points incrementally
Alternatively, use the \pause command, which displays contents of
the slide up to the rst marker, then up to the second marker, etc.
A B C D
X 1 2 3 4
Y 3 4 5 6
Z 5 6 7 8
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Simple overlays
Use \begin{itemize} \item<x-> \end{itemize} to display
bullet points incrementally
Alternatively, use the \pause command, which displays contents of
the slide up to the rst marker, then up to the second marker, etc.
A B C D
X 1 2 3 4
Y 3 4 5 6
Z 5 6 7 8
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Simple overlays
Use \begin{itemize} \item<x-> \end{itemize} to display
bullet points incrementally
Alternatively, use the \pause command, which displays contents of
the slide up to the rst marker, then up to the second marker, etc.
A B C D
X 1 2 3 4
Y 3 4 5 6
Z 5 6 7 8
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Simple overlays
Use \begin{itemize} \item<x-> \end{itemize} to display
bullet points incrementally
Alternatively, use the \pause command, which displays contents of
the slide up to the rst marker, then up to the second marker, etc.
A B C D
X 1 2 3 4
Y 3 4 5 6
Z 5 6 7 8
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More complex overlays
The \uncover<x-> command orders the displaying of items.
class helloWorld
{
public static void main(String args[])
{
System.out.println("Hello World!");
}
}
\alert<x>{<<text>>} colours text red on the x-th iteration of
displaying items
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More complex overlays
The \uncover<x-> command orders the displaying of items.
class helloWorld
{
public static void main(String args[])
{
System.out.println("Hello World!");
}
}
\alert<x>{<<text>>} colours text red on the x-th iteration of
displaying items
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More complex overlays
The \uncover<x-> command orders the displaying of items.
class helloWorld
{
public static void main(String args[])
{
System.out.println("Hello World!");
}
}
\alert<x>{<<text>>} colours text red on the x-th iteration of
displaying items
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More complex overlays
The \uncover<x-> command orders the displaying of items.
class helloWorld
{
public static void main(String args[])
{
System.out.println("Hello World!");
}
}
\alert<x>{<<text>>} colours text red on the x-th iteration of
displaying items
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What next
This presentation uses only a fraction of Beamers capabilities
See the Beamer User Guide to learn how to:
create slide transitions
add notes
print handouts
add multimedia (sound, video)
...and much more!
Alternatively, see
http://www.matthiaspospiech.de/latex/vorlagen/
beamer/content/beamer-examples/
for a shorter, example-based guide
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What next
This presentation uses only a fraction of Beamers capabilities
See the Beamer User Guide to learn how to:
create slide transitions
add notes
print handouts
add multimedia (sound, video)
...and much more!
Alternatively, see
http://www.matthiaspospiech.de/latex/vorlagen/
beamer/content/beamer-examples/
for a shorter, example-based guide
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What next
This presentation uses only a fraction of Beamers capabilities
See the Beamer User Guide to learn how to:
create slide transitions
add notes
print handouts
add multimedia (sound, video)
...and much more!
Alternatively, see
http://www.matthiaspospiech.de/latex/vorlagen/
beamer/content/beamer-examples/
for a shorter, example-based guide
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What next
This presentation uses only a fraction of Beamers capabilities
See the Beamer User Guide to learn how to:
create slide transitions
add notes
print handouts
add multimedia (sound, video)
...and much more!
Alternatively, see
http://www.matthiaspospiech.de/latex/vorlagen/
beamer/content/beamer-examples/
for a shorter, example-based guide
16 of 16
What next
This presentation uses only a fraction of Beamers capabilities
See the Beamer User Guide to learn how to:
create slide transitions
add notes
print handouts
add multimedia (sound, video)
...and much more!
Alternatively, see
http://www.matthiaspospiech.de/latex/vorlagen/
beamer/content/beamer-examples/
for a shorter, example-based guide
16 of 16
What next
This presentation uses only a fraction of Beamers capabilities
See the Beamer User Guide to learn how to:
create slide transitions
add notes
print handouts
add multimedia (sound, video)
...and much more!
Alternatively, see
http://www.matthiaspospiech.de/latex/vorlagen/
beamer/content/beamer-examples/
for a shorter, example-based guide
16 of 16
What next
This presentation uses only a fraction of Beamers capabilities
See the Beamer User Guide to learn how to:
create slide transitions
add notes
print handouts
add multimedia (sound, video)
...and much more!
Alternatively, see
http://www.matthiaspospiech.de/latex/vorlagen/
beamer/content/beamer-examples/
for a shorter, example-based guide
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