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Welcome to Org Beamer reference card. It contains the reference documentation that describes how to write presentations based on:
- Org mode 9 and
- the LaTeX Beamer class.
Those free tools allow you to easily produce high quality PDF files which are going to be displayed on every computer exactly the way they looked on your computer.
Since they are like any other Org mode document, authoring presentations with Org Beamer is very easy, thanks to its straightforward syntax.
The obvious advantages of this approach are that:
- you don’t have to know LaTeX in order to create Beamer presentations.
- you are more productive when editing presentations:
- you can expand and collapse slides,
- you can switch quickly between slides by using navigation (speed) commands,
- you can incorporate code blocks (in R or in many other languages) for illustration, and evaluate them to actually render output (including plots).
- A working LaTeX installation is required for exporting to PDF. If it is not yet installed on your system, install TeX Live (for example).
- You must define a
beamer
class inorg-latex-export-classes
:(eval-after-load "ox-latex" ;; update the list of LaTeX classes and associated header (encoding, etc.) ;; and structure '(add-to-list 'org-latex-classes `("beamer" ,(concat "\\documentclass[presentation]{beamer}\n" "[DEFAULT-PACKAGES]" "[PACKAGES]" "[EXTRA]\n") ("\\section{%s}" . "\\section*{%s}") ("\\subsection{%s}" . "\\subsection*{%s}") ("\\subsubsection{%s}" . "\\subsubsection*{%s}"))))
- For nice code blocks, use Listings instead of Verbatim:
(setq org-latex-src-block-backend 'listings)
The very first slide (called frame in a Beamer presentation) is the title page. By default, it will automatically be displayed with the following elements:
- the document title
#+TITLE: Document title
(file name, if none specified – could be removed in the future)
- the author(s)’s name
#+AUTHOR: John Doe
(Emacs Lisp variable
user-full-name
, if none specified) - a date
#+DATE: 2017-01-01
(LaTeX macro
\today
, if none specified)
The insertion of \author
can be turned off with:
#+OPTIONS: author:nil
The author’s email can be included with:
#+AUTHOR: \href{mailto:[email protected]}{John Doe}
#+AUTHOR: \texorpdfstring{John Doe\newline\url{[email protected]}}{John Doe} % DOES NOT WORK XXX -> BEAMER_HEADER???
#+BEAMER_HEADER: \author{\texorpdfstring{John Doe\newline\url{[email protected]}}{John Doe}} % BAD ORDER XXX
Other elements:
- the document subtitle,
- their affiliation (institute), and
- a title graphic
can be included with the following commands:
#+BEAMER_HEADER: \subtitle{Document subtitle}
#+BEAMER_HEADER: \institute[INST]{Institute\\\url{http://www.institute.edu}}
#+BEAMER_HEADER: \titlegraphic{\includegraphics[height=1.5cm]{InstLogo}}
XXX Why do I have to use :eval no (in Org blocks)?
The inner theme dictates how the title page is rendered.
#+BEAMER_HEADER: \logo{\includegraphics[height=.9cm]{InstLogo}}
Insert an image in the title slide that fills the whole width of the slide but limits to half height.
#+BEAMER_HEADER:
\titlegraphic{
\includegraphics[width=\textwidth,height=.5\textheight]{someimage}
}
(on one line.)
Org mode presentations contain headings at different levels.
By default,
- Headings at the first outline level will become titles of the different frames.
- Deeper levels will be used as structural environments.
- The table of contents frame is created but is blank
(you’ll understand why later).
You can remove it by setting the
toc
option (default:t
) from the#+OPTIONS:
keyword tonil
:
#+OPTIONS: toc:nil
* Frame 1
Some content.
** Block
This is a block.
To create a frame with bullets, you simply use standard Org mode bullets:
* A title
#+Beamer: \framesubtitle{A subtitle}
- Bullet 1
- Bullet 2
- Bullet 3
Content within frames is formatted using standard Org mode syntax.
The optional subtitle does not have an Org syntax because it’s specific to the Beamer back-end only.
How to center pictures horizontally?
\usetikzlibrary{shapes,arrows}
\begin{tikzpicture}[->, auto, node distance=3cm]
\node [draw] (A) {A};
\node [ellipse, draw, right of=A] (B) {B};
\path (A) edge node {message} (B);
\end{tikzpicture}
The problem was three-fold:
- My `org-latex-pdf-process` was a call to latexmk that did not set
`-outdir`. This was fine for exporting a document as LaTeX as all the work happened in the one directory, but evaluating a LaTeX src block involves a temporary directory.
- The value substituted for the `%o` placeholder in `org-latex-pdf-process`
included a trailing slash which prevented it from working due to a double slash appearing in constructed paths (looking at my notes, I seem to have removed this parameter because of this problem). I now set `-outdir` to the output of a sub-shell that pipes `%o` through sed to remove the trailing slash.
- I still encountered an error when evaluating the src block even though the PDF
was being produced. The error was during cleanup of temporary files, specifically a .log file. The failure to delete a nonexistent file was stopping the Org machinery that would next insert the result in my document. I addressed this by changing the second parameter of the call to `directory-files` in the `org-latex-compile` function from `nil` to `t` so that it would return absolute paths.
Since making those three changes, I am able to evaluate LaTeX src blocks and have the resulting figures appear in my Org document.
Look at wrapfig
or parinc
Here is a simple R code block…
#+begin_src R :exports both
summary(cars)
#+end_src
… that will display the code and show its output in the frame:
summary(cars)
Min. : 4.0 | Min. : 2.00 |
1st Qu.:12.0 | 1st Qu.: 26.00 |
Median :15.0 | Median : 36.00 |
Mean :15.4 | Mean : 42.98 |
3rd Qu.:19.0 | 3rd Qu.: 56.00 |
Max. :25.0 | Max. :120.00 |
XXX Is this needed?
#+LATEX_HEADER: \lstdefinelanguage{R}{}
To display a code block without evaluating it, you specify the :eval no
option:
#+begin_src R :eval no
summary(cars)
#+end_src
It only renders the code:
summary(cars)
To display the output of a code block without echoing the underlying code, you
specify the :exports results
option:
#+begin_src R :exports results
summary(cars)
#+end_src
It only renders the results:
Min. : 4.0 | Min. : 2.00 |
1st Qu.:12.0 | 1st Qu.: 26.00 |
Median :15.0 | Median : 36.00 |
Mean :15.4 | Mean : 42.98 |
3rd Qu.:19.0 | 3rd Qu.: 56.00 |
Max. :25.0 | Max. :120.00 |
Code blocks can also be used to include plots within presentations.
To display a plot while omitting the code used to generate it, you can include a code block like this:
#+begin_src R :exports results :results graphics :file qplot.png
plot(cars)
#+end_src
If you set the H
option from the #+OPTIONS:
keyword (or the
org-beamer-frame-level
variable) to 2
:
#+OPTIONS: H:2 toc:t
then:
- First-level headings become sections listed in the table of contents[fn:: The items in the TOC are clickable and take you to specific frames in the presentation.], and
- Second-level headings become the frames.
XXX Misplaced footnote!
If you set the H
value to 3
in the OPTIONS
line:
#+OPTIONS: H:3 toc:t
then:
- First- and second-level headings become sections and subsections listed in the table of contents, and
- Third-level headings become the frames.
In many themes, sections (and subsections, when H:3
) appear in the sidebar or
heading.
Type:
M-x load-library RET ox-beamer RET
to load the Beamer back-end library, and to obtain extra commands in the LaTeX export menu:
C-c C-e l B
- Export as LaTeX buffer (Beamer).
C-c C-e l b
- Export as LaTeX file (Beamer).
C-c C-e l P
- Export as PDF file (Beamer).
C-c C-e l O
- Export as PDF file and open (Beamer).
Type:
M-x org-beamer-mode RET
to load the minor mode org-beamer-mode
easing the edition of the document
structure (through the key binding C-c C-b
, which offers fast selection of
a Beamer environment).
You can also turn it on with:
#+STARTUP: beamer
in your document.
Label to theorem.
You can distribute your presentation in the form of handouts.
Presentations exported in this manner are entirely animation-free: overlays are removed and just the last “slide” of each frame is printed.
#+LATEX_CLASS_OPTIONS: [handout]
#+LATEX_HEADER: \usepackage{pgfpages}
#+LATEX_HEADER: \mode<handout>
#+LATEX_HEADER: {
#+LATEX_HEADER: ... see below ...
#+LATEX_HEADER: }
- with one frame per A4 page (extending page size)
#+LATEX_HEADER: \pgfpagesuselayout{resize to}[a4paper,landscape]
- with two frames per A4 page
#+LATEX_HEADER: \pgfpagesuselayout{2 on 1}[a4paper,border shrink=5mm]
- with four frames per A4 page
#+LATEX_HEADER: \pgfpagesuselayout{4 on 1}[a4paper,border shrink=5mm,% #+LATEX_HEADER: landscape]
Add a rectangle around each frame in the handout:
#+LATEX_HEADER: \setbeamertemplate{background canvas}{
#+LATEX_HEADER: \tikz \draw (current page.north west) rectangle
#+LATEX_HEADER: (current page.south east);
#+LATEX_HEADER: }
Show reminders about what to say during each part of your presentation.
Your laptop monitor and your projector should have the same resolution.
http://freakazoid.teamblind.de/2011/03/30/latex-presentations-with-notes-on-windows-7/
See Guido Diepen’s handoutWithNotes.sty for PowerPoint like handout.
#+LATEX_HEADER: \usepackage{handoutWithNotes}
#+LATEX_HEADER: \pgfpagesuselayout{3 on 1 with notes}[a4paper,border shrink=5mm]
Using beamerarticle
.
#+LATEX_CLASS_OPTIONS:
Common options:
8pt
,9pt
,10pt
,11pt
(default),12pt
,14pt
,17pt
,20pt
draft
: no graphics, footlines,…handout
: no overlays
#+LaTeX_CLASS_options: [bigger,allowframebreaks]
Beamer now supports the 16:9 aspect ratio with the aspectratio
option:
#+LaTeX_CLASS_options: [aspectratio=169]
Append any line of code in the LaTeX preamble with keywords specific to the LaTeX and Beamer back-ends:
#+LATEX_HEADER: \usepackage{...}
#+LATEX_HEADER_EXTRA: \usepackage{...}
#+BEAMER_HEADER: \institute[short name]{Institute}
It will go (in that order) in the [EXTRA]
placeholder of the header associated
to the beamer
LaTeX class (see ~org-latex-classes~).
You can include raw LaTeX in your Org presentations and it will get kept as LaTeX when it’s exported.
#+begin_export LaTeX
\begin{minipage}{4cm}
...
\end{minipage}
#+end_export
#+LaTeX: \parbox{4cm}{...}
Such LaTeX code will only be present in the exports to LaTeX and Beamer.
#+begin_export Beamer
\begin{minipage}{4cm}
...
\end{minipage}
#+end_export
#+Beamer: \parbox{4cm}{...}
Such LaTeX code will only be present in the export to Beamer.
It is especially useful for more advanced stuff like images or tables where you need more control of the LaTeX options than Org mode actually gives you.
For example, to insert a table with colspan or rowspan support:
#+begin_export LaTeX
\begin{tabular}{|l|l|l|}
\hline
Text1 & Text2 & Text3 \\
\hline
\multicolumn{3}{|c|}{Merged text here} \\
\hline
\end{tabular}
#+end_export
\begin{tabular}{|l|l|l|}
\hline
Text1 & Text2 & Text3
\hline
\multicolumn{3}{|c|}{Merged text here} \
\hline
\end{tabular}
The Beamer back-end reads both
#+ATTR_LATEX:
and#+ATTR_BEAMER:
affiliated keywords.
XXX Code with figure or table
You can specify a Beamer theme using the #+BEAMER_THEME
keyword.
For example:
#+BEAMER_THEME: Boadilla
which is equivalent (for Boadilla
) to:
#+BEAMER_COLOR_THEME: dolphin
#+BEAMER_FONT_THEME: default
#+BEAMER_INNER_THEME: [shadow]rounded
#+BEAMER_OUTER_THEME: infolines
Fonts must be present on the system you’re presenting on – or it will go back to a fallback font.
Font Risque.
#+LATEX_HEADER: \usepackage[frenchstyle]{kpfonts}
Something along these lines will work:
#+LaTeX: {\footnotesize
... Org stuff here ...
#+LaTeX: }
Choose the font size you want.
You can also shrink individual frames in Beamer by adding a BEAMER option
property to the frame’s headline. You can also specify a percentage, as in
shrink=10
:
* The frame title
:PROPERTIES:
:BEAMER_opt: shrink=10
:END:
For a column view of options and configurations for the individual frames
#+COLUMNS: %45ITEM %10BEAMER_env(Env) %10BEAMER_act(Act) %4BEAMER_col(Col) %8BEAMER_opt(Opt)
#+COLUMNS: %20ITEM %13BEAMER_env(Env) %6BEAMER_envargs(Args) %4BEAMER_col(Col) %7BEAMER_extra(Extra)
XXX Put = or ~ around BEAMER_env in title…
- This becomes visible through the
B_frame
tag (visual aid only).
If a heading in the current tree has a BEAMER_env
property set to either frame
or fullframe
, its level overrides the H
value, giving you some flexibility in
deciding what is and what isn’t a frame.
#+OPTIONS: H:2 toc:t
* Section 1
** Frame
* Section 2
** Subsection 2.1
*** Frame :B_frame:
:PROPERTIES:
:BEAMER_env: frame
:END:
This becomes a frame, instead of a block!
This works in both “directions”: to add or to remove sectioning levels above the current heading (which becomes a frame)!
If a heading in the current tree has a BEAMER_env
property set to fullframe
,
the frame will not display its title (frametitle
is being set to the empty
string).
*** Frame :B_fullframe:
:PROPERTIES:
:BEAMER_env: fullframe
:END:
This becomes a frame, with its title ignored!
Insert a default block (syntax assumes H:2
).
*** A block
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod
tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.
Comments:
- Use the
BEAMER_env
property to specify a different block type for the current “block” environment. - Use ignoreheading to terminate a block environment
Insert a block whose title is highlighted.
*** An alert block :B_alertblock:
:PROPERTIES:
:BEAMER_env: alertblock
:END:
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod
tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.
Insert a block that is supposed to be an example.
*** An example block :B_exampleblock:
:PROPERTIES:
:BEAMER_env: exampleblock
:END:
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod
tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.
Create colored boxes whose “beamer color” to use (= a pair of colors: bg
+ fg
)
is defined by the heading text, for example title in head/foot
or myblockcolor
.
#+LaTeX: \setbeamercolor{myblockcolor}{bg=magenta,fg=white}
*** myblockcolor :B_beamercolorbox:
:PROPERTIES:
:BEAMER_env: beamercolorbox
:END:
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod
tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.
*** myblockcolor :B_beamercolorbox:
:PROPERTIES:
:BEAMER_env: beamercolorbox
:BEAMER_opt: wd=6cm
:END:
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod
tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.
*** myblockcolor :B_beamercolorbox:
:PROPERTIES:
:BEAMER_env: beamercolorbox
:BEAMER_opt: shadow=false,rounded=true
:END:
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod
tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.
*** myblockcolor :B_beamercolorbox:
:PROPERTIES:
:BEAMER_env: beamercolorbox
:BEAMER_opt: shadow=true,rounded=true
:END:
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod
tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.
- For highlighting text.
- To help the audience see the structure of your presentation.
Paragraph Heading. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.
- Behaves like the
theorem
environment, except that the theorem styledefinition
is used. - In this style, the body of a
theorem
is typeset in an upright font.
*** Prime number :B_definition:
:PROPERTIES:
:BEAMER_env: definition
:END:
A prime number is a natural number greater than 1 that has no positive divisors
other than 1 and itself.
A prime number is a natural number greater than 1 that has no positive divisors other than 1 and itself.
- Behave like the
theorem
environment, except that the theorem styleexample
is used. - A side-effect of using this theorem style is that the contents is put in an
exampleblock
instead of ablock
.
*** Number 5 :B_example:
:PROPERTIES:
:BEAMER_env: example
:END:
5 can only be divided evenly by 1 or 5, so it is a prime number.
5 can only be divided evenly by 1 or 5, so it is a prime number.
- Insert a theorem.
- Italicized body.
*** Niessen, 2010 :B_theorem:
:PROPERTIES:
:BEAMER_env: theorem
:END:
Statement of theorem (proposition): \\
Org mode + Beamer = productivity^{2}
Statement of theorem (proposition):
Org mode + Beamer = productivity2
- Typeset a proof.
- Period (full-stop) added at the end of the title.
- Control sequence
\qed
(quod erat demonstrandum, for the traditional “tombstone”) added at the end of the proof.
*** Proof :B_proof:
:PROPERTIES:
:BEAMER_env: proof
:END:
Description of proof.
Description of proof.
Use quote
to typeset short quoted text (or a series of small quotes, separated
by blank lines): it hasn’t paragraph indentation.
#+begin_quote
"Don't give up on your dreams, keep on sleeping." --- Albert Einstein
#+end_quote
“Don’t give up on your dreams, keep on sleeping.” — Albert Einstein
If you want to place the source or the author’s name at the right, after the quote, you can use these commands:
#+LaTeX: \begin{raggedleft}
(Albert Einstein)
#+LaTeX: \par\end{raggedleft}
(Albert Einstein)
Use quotation
to typeset longer quoted text (one or more paragraphs) because it
indents the first line of each paragraph.
#+begin_quotation
"Two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I am not yet
completely sure about the universe."
--- Albert Einstein
#+end_quotation
Use verse
for quotations where line breaks are important, such as poetry.
#+begin_verse
"Sit next to a pretty girl for an hour,
it seems like a minute.
Sit on a red-hot stove for a minute,
it seems like an hour.
That's relativity!"
--- Albert Einstein
#+end_verse
- More readable, more portable, more natural mapping when environments exist (LaTeX + other backends): you can use special Org blocks. For example:
#+begin_theorem
There is no largest prime number.
#+end_theorem
You could use subsections for columns or nested structure and blocks for simple “boxes” in your frame.
- More powerful: you can’t nest blocks of the same type with this syntax, and more portable when environments only exist in Beamer (then, they will appear as subheadings when exported to other backends)
- Use an empty heading with a non-breaking space (or
\phantom{dummy}
) for an empty block title.
*** :B_theorem:
:PROPERTIES:
:BEAMER_env: theorem
:END:
There is no largest prime number.
If there is nothing after the block, no need to insert a heading for demarcating the end.
!Exception! The example
environment can’t be written in the short notation, as
that one exists in Org and is translated to a verbatim
LaTeX environment by
default.
#+attr_latex: :options [Lagrange]
#+begin_theorem
Let $G$ be a finite group, and let $H$ be a subgroup of $G$. Then the order of
$H$ divides the order of $G$.
#+end_theorem
*** Lagrange :B_theorem:
:PROPERTIES:
:BEAMER_env: theorem
:END:
Let $G$ be a finite group, and let $H$ be a subgroup of $G$. Then the order of
$H$ divides the order of $G$.
*** End of block :B_ignoreheading:
:PROPERTIES:
:BEAMER_env: ignoreheading
:END:
#+attr_latex: :options [Prime number]
#+begin_definition
A prime number is...
#+end_definition
*** Prime number :B_definition:
:PROPERTIES:
:BEAMER_env: definition
:END:
A prime number is...
*** End of block :B_ignoreheading:
:PROPERTIES:
:BEAMER_env: ignoreheading
:END:
For simple environments, use:
I think we should changes some environment placeholders:
- Introduce %r which would stand for the raw heading (without any processing)
- %H and %U would use the raw heading text instead.
The previous definition would become:
WDYT?
It never would have occurred to me on my own to use the heading text for LaTeX code. That’s a conceptual leap that passed me by.
- Environment options may be given using the BEAMER_opt property. They will be enclosed in square brackets and inserted where %o appears in the environment definition. (with an example, but I can’t think of one now)
- Additional arguments may be written into the environment’s heading, and inserted into the LaTeX string using %r (raw heading text, no processing).
To get multiple columns in a frame:
- Press
C-c C-b |
(BMCOL
) on the headings (inside the frame) which will become columns.The heading of column environments won’t be outputted in the PDF file.
- Specify the column width as a percentage of
\textwidth
.
Instead of block
, those structural environments will become column
(with the
width parameter as a factor of \textwidth
).
Consecutive column
environments will be put in a columns
environment.
First column
Two \ lines.
The arithmetic mean is equal to the summation of n
numbers divided by n
.
Second column
One line (but aligned).
$\frac{1}{n} ∑i=1n xi$
If you want to float an image to the left or right, simply include it within a 2-column layout.
This text will appear \ to the right.
You can change the percent space of each column.
If you want like one column to take 70% and the other to take 30%, you can change that as follows:
XXX
Colonne 1.
Colonne 2.
Visualise the width by transforming the columns into blocks…
Balancing text in columns.
- Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.
- Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat.
- Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla pariatur.
- Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non proident, sunt in culpa qui officia deserunt mollit anim id est laborum.
You can add an appendix (frames that you do not intend to show during your talk, but which might be useful to answer a question) by inserting such a level 1 heading after the last regular slide of your actual presentation:
* Appendix material follows :B_appendix:
:PROPERTIES:
:BEAMER_env: appendix
:END:
# Backup slides
Ignoring page number in backup slides can be achieved by setting the option
noframenumbering
on all “backup” slides.
To keep your presentation notes (reminders about what to say), add a heading
below the frame, and select the note
environment with C-c C-b
.
#+LATEX_HEADER: \setbeameroption{show notes}
*** Some note :B_note:
:PROPERTIES:
:BEAMER_env: note
:END:
This is a note.
- Stress this first.
- Then this.
Note with its title ignored.
You can “continue” frames that you previously started somewhere (but where certain details have been suppressed) at a much later point (for example only in the appendix) to show additional slides there.
For convenience (since those are mandatory), when asking for an againframe
, Org
Beamer always asks for:
BEAMER_ref
property to refer, using link syntax, to (the label of) the frame being resumed, andBEAMER_act
property to set the overlay specification.
An advantage is that you don’t need to know the label of the frame being
resumed: :BEAMER_ref: *My frame title
.
\againframe<BEAMER_act>{BEAMER_ref's name}
Contents are ignored.
XXX How to label a frame? Via :BEAMER_opt: label=id
or via other means?
Need to “close” a block environment, if followed by something else than a block.
*** End of block :B_ignoreheading:
:PROPERTIES:
:BEAMER_env: ignoreheading
:END:
- A heading with an
ignoreheading
environment will have only its contents inserted in the output.- Contents is not inserted in any
frame
environment…
- Contents is not inserted in any
- This special value is useful to have data between frames, or to properly close a ~column~ environment.
Set overlay / action specifications in current frame or block to create dynamic
effects (multiple slides, called overlays, for a single frame) = old
BEAMER_envargs
property.
Overlay specifications are given inside angular brackets.
XXX <> seem to be added when they aren’t present. Copied as is if present.
Headings support the BEAMER_act
property:
** Heading
:PROPERTIES:
:BEAMER_act: [<+->]
:END:
- Item
- Item
It is translated as:
- an overlay/action specification, or
- a default overlay specification when enclosed within square brackets.
It has an effect on all enumeration commands and all block environments inside
the frame: they will be uncovered piece-wise with an incremental specification
like <+->
.
<+>
Means that this material should appear on the next slide.<+->
means that this appears on the next slide, and all subsequent slides.
Dynamic lists are possible on a case by case basis with the :overlay
specification:
#+ATTR_BEAMER: :overlay <+->
- Item 1
- Item 2
- @@beamer:<1->@@ Item 1
- @@beamer:<2->@@ Item 2
can be shortened to:
- @@b:<1->@@ Item 1
- @@b:<2->@@ Item 2
with:
;; export snippet translations
(add-to-list 'org-export-snippet-translation-alist
'("b" . "beamer"))
- <1-| alert@1> Suppose p were the largest prime number.
- <2-> Let q be the product of the first p numbers.
- <3-> Then q + 1 is not divisible by any of them.
- <1-> But q + 1 is greater than 1, thus divisible by some prime number not in the first p numbers.
Overlay specification for bold markup in the label of a description list:
- Test
- of a @@beamer:<2->@@useful feature!
- @@beamer:<2->@@Test 2
- of the same feature
> What may not be easy or possible is to use the \only directive.
You can always use the only environment. https://github.com/suvayu/.emacs.d/blob/master/org-mode-config.el#L215
That said, I think overlays with only is not as smooth as with simple
overlay specifications to regular environments or macros like
\includegraphics
, \item
, etc.
- Princess Anne
- Prince Charles
- corgis
\begin{figure}
\begin{center}
\includegraphics<1>[width=.7\textwidth]{figure1}
\includegraphics<2>[width=.7\textwidth]{figure2}
\includegraphics<3->[width=.7\textwidth]{figure3}
\end{center}
\end{figure}
The following works for me:
#+Beamer: \only<1>{
[[file:figure1.png]]
#+Beamer: }\only<2>{
[[file:figure2.png]]
#+Beamer: }\only<3->{
[[file:figure3.png]]
#+Beamer: }
There is the BEAMER_act
property that can be used to apply overlay
information on blocks but I don’t think it’s possible on individual
figures. Of course, you could put each figure in a separate block. The
following/attached will match what you had originally.
#+options: H:1
* The slide
** figure 1
:PROPERTIES:
:beamer_act: <1>
:END:
[[file:chromosome.png]]
** figure 2
:PROPERTIES:
:beamer_act: <2>
:END:
[[file:diagram.png]]
** figure 3
:PROPERTIES:
:beamer_act: <3->
:END:
[[file:equation1.png]]
Insert optional arguments for the current ~frame~ or ~block~ environment using the
BEAMER_OPT
property.
The options will automatically be enclosed within square brackets. Don’t enclose them yourself!
You can add that special property by editing the Opt
column within the “column
view”:
- Turn on column view by pressing
C-c C-x C-c
(M-x org-columns
) - Go to the
Opt
column - Press
e
to edit its contents, and add your value - Exit the column editing by pressing
q
fragile
option is added automatically.
With:
:PROPERTIES:
:BEAMER_opt: label=name
:END:
You can set the label of a frame and then use \ref{name}
to get the slide
number.
You can specify top vertical alignment globally by the t
class option:
#+LaTeX_CLASS_OPTIONS: [t]
For single frames, you can use the same option locally:
** Vertically top-aligned
:PROPERTIES:
:BEAMER_opt: t
:END:
Some content.
If the text does not fit on a single slide, all you have to do to automatically
break up the frame into several frames, is set the option allowframebreaks
.
- To allow frame breaks on a frame by frame basis[fn:: Until the Beamer issue
#265 is solved, we need to unset the
framelabel
as shown above (label=
) when we use that option.]:** A very long "frame" with breaks :PROPERTIES: :BEAMER_opt: allowframebreaks,label= :END:
XXX This property shouldn’t be interpreted for the current slide!
- You might want to put
allowframebreaks=0.9
there
- To add an explicit page break:
#+beamer: \framebreak
- To allow frame breaks for all frames of the whole document[fn:: Till Tantau
(author of Beamer) was really not keen on the idea of setting the
auto-breaking frames option globally.]:
#+BIND: org-beamer-frame-default-options "allowframebreaks"
#
#
#
#
#
#
Skip proof
Text omitted in main talk.
Even more additional material.
Report issues and suggest features and improvements on the GitHub issue tracker.
I love contributions! Patches under any form are always welcome!
If you use the refcard-org-beamer project and feel it is making your life better and easier, you can show your appreciation and help support future development by making a donation through PayPal. Thank you!
Regardless of the donations, refcard-org-beamer will always be free both as in beer and as in speech.
Copyright (C) 2013-2024 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Author: Fabrice Niessen
Keywords: reference card org-beamer
This file is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This file is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this file. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.