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author | Thomas White <taw@physics.org> | 2017-10-17 21:04:05 +0200 |
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committer | Thomas White <taw@physics.org> | 2017-10-17 21:04:05 +0200 |
commit | 0ca1ff2b1b3743cd555c5853dff8aec488a06ed3 (patch) | |
tree | 384c3d7fc95cf2c9284f64e776353d0dee24a0ca | |
parent | 9c929b373d0ffa3fbd8e0de670caaab95b58a101 (diff) |
Update demo doc
-rw-r--r-- | data/demo.sc | 5 |
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/data/demo.sc b/data/demo.sc index dfc23cf..77a3bad 100644 --- a/data/demo.sc +++ b/data/demo.sc @@ -15,8 +15,8 @@ \template[credit,name="Credit"]{\credit{Image: }} }\paraspace[0,0,10,10]\pad[10,10,10,10]\fgcol[#222222]\bgcol[#ffffff]\fontsize[40]{\bold{}Hi there, welcome to \bold{Colloquium}!} -\fontsize[16]It looks like this is the first time you've used Colloquium. This document will help you understand a little bit about how Colloquium works and how to use it. -Colloquium works differently to most other presentation programs. Instead of treating slides as the most important objects, Colloquium makes \italic{narrative }the centre of attention. Slides come when you need to illustrate something. This window is called the \oblique{narrative editor}. Your slides are embedded into the narrative text, like this: +\fontsize[16]It looks like this is the first time you've used Colloquium. Keep reading to understand a little bit about how Colloquium works and how to use it. +Colloquium works differently to other presentation programs. Colloquium makes \italic{narrative, not slides,} the centre of attention. Slides come when you need to illustrate something. This window is called the \oblique{narrative editor}. Your slides are embedded into the narrative text, like this: \slide{ \prestitle{Presentation title!} \f[836.7ux156.5u+100.3+565.5]{hel\fontsize[40]{lo?}} @@ -27,7 +27,6 @@ To edit a slide, simply double-click on it. Try it on this next slide: \slidetitle{Here is the slide title!} \footer{} \f[425.5ux85.0u+456.3+513.9]{Close this window when you've finished editing...}\f[915.5ux78.1u+58.0+126.6]{Editing slides works how you expect it to. Add a new text frame by dragging from an empty area. Then simply type into the new frame.}\f[454.3ux139.3u+142.6+295.8]{Click and drag frames to move them, and change their shape and size by dragging the handles at the corners.}\f[0.0ux1.0u+809.1+430.0]{}} - You can add a new slide from the "Insert" menu or using the toolbar at the top of the narrative window. Try it now: click to place the cursor at the end of this paragraph, then add a new slide. What is the narrative window for? Well, it's up to you! Here are some suggestions: \bp{}Use it just to help plan a smooth flow for your talk, reading it through to spot awkward transitions. |