On this page:
1.1 Slide Basics
1.2 Staging Slides
1.3 Display Size and Fonts
1.4 Command-line Options
1.5 Printing

1 Creating Slide Presentations

The slideshow module acts as a language that includes:

The slideshow and slideshow/base module initialization also check the current-command-line-arguments parameter to configure the slide mode (e.g., printing).

The rest of this section repeats information that is presented by the tutorial slideshow, which can be viewed by running the slideshow executable and clicking the Run Tutorial link.

1.1 Slide Basics

The main Slideshow function is slide, which adds a slide to the presentation with a given content. For example, the “Hello World” presentation can be defined by the following module:

#lang slideshow
 
(slide
 #:title "How to Say Hello"
 (t "Hello World!"))

The t function in this example creates a pict containing the given text using the default font and style.

Executing the above module pops up a slide-presentation window. Type Alt-q (or Meta-q) to end the slides. Here are more controls:

  

Alt-q, Meta-q, or Cmd-q

 : 

end slide show

  

Esc

 : 

if confirmed, end show

  

Right arrow, Space, f, n, or click

 : 

next slide

  

Left arrow, Backspace, Delete, or b

 : 

previous slide

  

g

 : 

last slide

  

1

 : 

first slide

  

s

 : 

next slide with a different title/name

  

a

 : 

previous slide starting different title/name

  

Alt-g, Cmd-g, or Meta-g

 : 

select a slide

  

Alt-p, Cmd-p, or Meta-p

 : 

show/hide slide number

  

Alt-c, Cmd-c, or Meta-c

 : 

show/hide commentary

  

Alt-d, Cmd-d, or Meta-d

 : 

show/hide preview

  

Alt-m, Cmd-m, or Meta-m

 : 

show/hide mouse cursor

  

Shift with arrow

 : 

move window 1 pixel

  

Alt, Meta, or Cmd with arrow

 : 

move window 10 pixels

The slide function accepts any number of arguments. Each argument is a pict to be centered on the slide. The picts are stacked vertically with (current-gap-size) separation between each pict, and the total result is centered (as long as there’s a gap of at least (* 2 (current-gap-size)) between the title and content).

#lang slideshow
 
(slide
 #:title "How to Say Hello"
 (t "Hello World!")
 (t "Goodbye Dlrow!"))

Various functions format paragraphs and generate bulleted items for lists. For example, item creates a bulleted paragraph that spans (by default) the middle 2/3 of the slide:

#lang slideshow
 
(slide
 #:title "How to Say Hello"
 (item "If you want to create an example, you"
      "can always do something with" (bt "Hello World!"))
 (item "It's a bit silly, but a follow-up example"
       "could be" (bt "Goodbye Dlrow!")))

As the example illustrates, the item function accepts a mixture of strings and picts, and it formats them as a paragraph.

1.2 Staging Slides

The slide function creates a slide as a side effect. It can be put inside a function to abstract over a slide:

#lang slideshow
 
(define (slide-n n)
  (slide
   #:title "How to Generalize Slides"
   (item "This is slide number" (number->string n))))
 
(slide-n 1)
(slide-n 2)
(slide-n 3)

The slide function also has built-in support for some common multi-slide patterns. Each element argument to slide is usually a pict, but there are a few other possibilities:

Here’s an example to illustrate how 'next and 'alts work:

#lang slideshow
 
(slide
 #:title "Example"
 (item "First step")
 'next
 (item "Second step")
 'next
 'alts
 (list (list (item "Tentative third step")
             'next
             (item "This isn't working... back up"))
       (list (item "Third step that works")))
 'next
 (item "Fourth step"))

1.3 Display Size and Fonts

Slideshow is configured for generating slides in 1024 by 768 pixel format. When the current display has a different size as Slideshow is started, the Slideshow display still occupies the entire screen, and pictures are scaled just before they are displayed. Thus, one picture unit reliably corresponds to a “pixel” that occupies 1/1024 by 1/768 of the screen.

The text form for generating text pictures takes into account any expected scaling for the display when measuring text. (All Slideshow text functions, such as t and item are built on text.) In particular, scaling the picture causes a different font size to be used for drawing the slide—rather than bitmap-scaling the original font—and changing the font size by a factor of k does not necessarily scale all text dimensions equally by a factor of kbecause, for most devices, each character must have integer dimensions. Nevertheless, especially if you use the current-expected-text-scale parameter, Slideshow is usually able to produce good results when the slide is scaled.

More generally, different font sets on different platforms can change the way a slide is rendered. For example, the tt font on one platform might be slightly wider than on another, causing different line breaks, and so on. Beware.

Beware also of using bitmaps in slides when the presentation screen is not 1024 by 768. In that case, consider using size-in-pixels (with the caveat that the resulting picture will take up different amounts of the slide on different displays).

1.4 Command-line Options

 (require slideshow/start)

The slideshow executable instantiates the slideshow/start module, which inspects the command line as reported by current-command-line-arguments to get another module to require for the slide content.The slideshow/start module also initializes variables like printing? and condense? based on flags supplied on the command line.

Thus, if the above example is in "multi-step.rkt", then the command

  slideshow multi-step.rkt

runs the slides.

If the module given to slideshow has a slideshow submodule, then slideshow/start requires the slideshow submodule after requireing the module. If the module has no slideshow but has a main submodule, then the main submodule is required.

The slideshow executable accepts a number of command-line flags. Use the --help flag to obtain a list of other flags.

1.5 Printing

The -p or --print command-line flag causes Slideshow to print slides instead of showing them on the screen using the current platform’s printing system. The -P or --ps generates PostScript directly, while -D or --pdf generates PDF directly.

PS-to-PDF converters vary on how well they handle landscape mode. Here’s a Ghostscript command that converts slides reliably (when you replace "src.ps" and "dest.pdf" with your file names):

  gs -q -dAutoRotatePages=/None -dSAFER -dNOPAUSE -dBATCH -sOutputFile=dest.pdf -sDEVICE=pdfwrite -c .setpdfwrite -c "<</Orientation 3>> setpagedevice" -f src.ps