Prototyping some ideas to simplify the tutorial experience in Azure App Service
First, install Jekyll. After that, clone this repository and create a branch for your new presentation:
git clone --recursive https://github.com/dploeger/jekyll-revealjs.git
git checkout -b presentation1
After that, add your slides into the _posts-subdirectory in clean Markdown syntax and you're ready to go with building your presentation with Jekyll:
jekyll build
You can even manage multiple presentations using the power of git. Simply branch from the master branch to create a new presentation:
git checkout master
git checkout -b presentation2
Because we're using the Jekyll posts-framework to easily gather the slides for the presentation, we're bound to the conventions of Jekyll posts, namely being
<year>-<month>-<day>-<title>.md
We recommend naming the files like
1-1-1-1-welcome.md
1-1-1-2-topics.md
and so forth.
Jekyll will assume, that each post has been made on the first of january, 2001 (which is of no interest for a presentation). The additional number is for sorting purposes. After that comes a title to identify the specific slide (which is actually only for the presentation author, Jekyll doesn't care about it).
You can configure almost any reveal.js setting using the _config.yml-settings file in the root directory.
- title: The title of your presentation (displayed in the browser's title bar)
- reveal_theme: The reveal.js-theme to use [default.css]
- reveal_transition: The reveal.js-transition to use [default]
- reveal_theme_path: The path to the reveal.js-theme (can be changed for custom themes) [reveal.js/css/theme/]
- reveal_notes_server: Wether to support the speaker notes server [false (only local speaker notes)]
- reveal_options: Additional reveal.js options
- reveal_dependencies: Additional reveal.js [dependencies][]
- reveal_path: Path to the reveal.js-installation reveal.js
If you want to use your custom reveal.js-theme, we recommend adding a directory "theme", putting the file(s) there and referencing that directory in the configuration "reveal_theme_path".
Don't mess with the reveal.js subdirectory as it is a subrepository and doesn't adhere to your repository's branches.
Reveal.js already includes a markdown interpreter, which we use for jekyll-reveal.js. We have already configured it and included some simplification just for you!
To use multiple slides in one slide file, use a newline, three dashes and another newline like this:
# Slide 1
This is the content of Slide 1
---
# Slide 2
This is the content of Slide 2
To use vertical slides, do the same, but use two dashes:
# Slide 1
This is the content of Slide 1
--
And this is a vertical slide below Slide 1
Fragments allow slide elements to come one by one. This is often used in lists to subsequently show fragments of a list during a presentation.
To use fragments, jekyll-reveal.js includes a jekyll-plugin, that simplifies the use of fragments in markdown. To specify the current element as a fragment, use the {% fragment %}-tag like this:
# Slide
* This {% fragment %}
* will {% fragment %}
* come one by one {% fragment %}
To modify the background of the current slide, jekyll-reveal.js also includes a simplification plugin:
# Slide
{% background white %}
This slide has a white background
jekyll-reveal.js is configured, so that speaker notes are identified after an introductory "Note:"-tag:
# Slide
Some slide content
Note:
This is only displayed in the speaker notes.