From d1397f434ed803c5b8820bf46a9ae06fdab20ece Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Thomas White Date: Sun, 22 Oct 2017 17:02:23 +0200 Subject: Update demo doc for shift key --- data/demo.sc | 3 ++- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) (limited to 'data/demo.sc') diff --git a/data/demo.sc b/data/demo.sc index 77a3bad..df6e9be 100644 --- a/data/demo.sc +++ b/data/demo.sc @@ -26,7 +26,8 @@ To edit a slide, simply double-click on it. Try it on this next slide: \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]{}} +\f[425.5ux85.0u+519.3+526.9]{Close this window when you've finished editing...}\f[383.5ux112.1u+62.0+139.6]{Editing slides works how you expect it to. Add a new text frame by holding shift and dragging from an empty area. Then simply type into the new frame.}\f[442.3ux120.3u+321.6+341.8]{Shift-click and drag frames to move them. +Change their shape and size by shift-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. -- cgit v1.2.3