Terminal tool for presenting Markdown-powered slide decks.
- Write slides in the Markdown with extended syntax.
- Show code snippets in fenced code blocks.
- Syntax highlight code for over 200 languages.
- Create Markdown tables with advanced formatting.
- Align slide content with familiar CSS syntax.
- Add margin around content for all or a single slide.
- Track progress through the slides with a pager.
- Display a footer at the bottom of every slide.
- Apply custom symbols and style theme to content.
- Auto reload presentation when a file with slides changes.
Slideck will work with any version of Ruby greater than or equal to 2.0
.
Read Installing Ruby
guide to choose the best installation method.
Once Ruby is set up, install the slideck
with:
$ gem install slideck
Open a text file and start writing slides in Markdown. Begin the document
by adding configuration for all slides in YAML
format. Then to denote
a slide, separate its content with three dashes. Use the same configuration
settings to override the global settings for a slide. To do so, specify
settings with YAML
flow mappings after the slide separator.
Here's a sample of a few slides with global and slide-specific configuration settings:
align: center
margin: 2 5
footer:
align: center bottom
text: Footer content
--- margin: 0
# Welcome to Slideck
## Built with TTY Toolkit
--- align: center top
# Code Block
```ruby
puts "Welcome to Slideck"
```
--- theme: {list: magenta}
# Unordered List
- Item 1
- Item 2
- Item 3
--- symbols: ascii
# Table
| A | B | C |
|---|---|---|
| a | b | c |
| a | b | c |
| a | b | c |
--- {pager: false, footer: false}
# The End
To start presenting, for example, slides.md
file in a terminal:
$ slideck slides.md
Use the -h
or --help
flag to see help about available presentation
controls and options:
$ slideck --help
Use the -w
or --watch
flag to automatically reload the presentation
with any update to the slides.md
file:
$ slideck slides.md --watch
Configuration options can be global or slide-specific.
Add global configuration options in YAML
format at the beginning
of a document.
For example, to configure alignment and margin for all slides:
align: center
margin: 2 5
---
First Slide
---
Second Slide
---
Use YAML
flow mappings syntax to change the global configuration for a given
slide. This format is a series of key/value pairs separated by commas and
surrounded by curly braces. The semicolon with space follows a key and splits
it from value. Braces are optional for a single key/value pair.
A slide-specific configuration follows three dashes and needs to be on
the same line.
For example, to override alignment and margin for a given slide:
align: center
margin: 2 5
--- margin: 0
First Slide
--- {align: center top, margin: 1 3}
Second Slide
---
Slideck draws the slide's content from the left top of the terminal screen
by default. It positions the pager at the bottom right corner. When given, the
footer ends up at the bottom left corner. Use the :align
configuration to
change the default positioning of content, footer and
pager.
The align
configuration takes either one or two values. The first value
specifies the horizontal alignment out of left
, center
and right
.
The second value describes vertical alignment out of the top
, center
and bottom
. Skipping the second value will default the vertical alignment
to the center
. Use a space, comma or both to separate two values.
For example, to position content at the top center of the screen on every slide:
align: center top
Or use shorthand to place content at the center left on every slide:
align: left
Use the same configuration to change the alignment for a single slide. It needs to follow after the slide separator and be on the same line.
For example, to place a given slide at the bottom left:
--- align: left bottom
Slideck doesn't show the footer by default. Use the :footer
configuration
to add content to the bottom left of the screen for every slide.
For example, to display a footer on every slide:
footer: Footer content
The footer supports Markdown
syntax:
footer: **bold** content
The footer can also span more than one line:
footer: "first line\nsecond line\nthird line"
Use the :align
key to change the footer alignment and the :text
key
to specify its content.
For example, to specify a global footer at the bottom center of every slide:
footer:
align: center bottom
text: Footer content
Use the same configuration to change the footer for a single slide. It needs to follow after the slide separator and be on the same line.
For example, to place a footer at the bottom center of the screen:
--- footer: {align: center bottom, text: Footer content}
Or, use a false
value to hide a footer for a single slide:
--- footer: false
The margin
specifies a distance from all four sides of the terminal screen.
It follows CSS rules and can have one, two, three or four integer values. Use
a space or comma to separate each integer value.
The following are all possible ways to specify a margin:
margin: 1 # the same margin of 1 for all sides
margin: 1 2 # 1 to the top and bottom, and 2 to the left and right
margin: 1 2 3 # 1 to the top, 2 to the left and right, and 3 to the bottom
margin: 1 2 3 4 # 1 to the top, 2 to the right, 3 to the bottom, 4 to the left
Or, specify a margin with explicit side names:
margin:
top: 1
right: 2
bottom: 3
left: 4
Like shorthand notation, specify names only for the configured sides.
For example, to add only the top margin and leave all the other sides with their default values:
margin:
top: 1
Use the same configuration to change the margin for a single slide. It needs to follow after the slide separator and be on the same line.
For example, to zero out the margin for a given slide:
--- margin: 0
Slideck displays the pager
in the bottom right corner of the terminal
screen. The display format is %<page>d / %<total>d
, where the first
placeholder represents the current slide and the second is the total
number of slides.
For example, to change the pager display:
pager: "Page %<page>d of %<total>d"
The pager supports Markdown
syntax:
pager: "**Bold** %<total> pages"
The pager can also span more than one line:
pager: "Page\n%<page>d\nof\n%<total>d"
Use the :align
key to change the pager alignment and the :text
key
to specify its content.
For example, to place the pager at the bottom center of every slide:
pager:
align: center bottom
text: "Page %<page>d of %<total>d"
Or, use a false
value to hide a pager on all slides:
pager: false
Use the same configuration to change the pager for a single slide. It needs to follow after the slide separator and be on the same line.
For example, to place a pager at the bottom center of a given slide:
--- pager: {align: center bottom, text: "Page %<page>d of %<total>d"}
Or, use a false
value to hide a pager for a single slide:
--- pager: false
Slideck decorates Markdown
elements with unicode
symbols by default.
Use the :symbols
configuration to change the display of decorative
characters. It takes either a single value or key/value pairs. The single
value specifies a character set out of ascii
or unicode
. The key/value
pairs accept the :base
and :override
keys. Like a single value,
the :base
key takes either ascii
or unicode
.
For example, to change the default symbols for all slides to ascii
:
symbols: ascii
Or, use the :base
key to specify the ascii
character set:
symbols:
base: ascii
The :override
key accepts key/value pairs, where the key is a symbol name
and the value is a decorative character. Please see the
tty-markdown
for a complete list of symbols.
For example, to change the :bullet
symbol for every slide:
symbols:
override:
bullet: x
Use the same configuration to change the symbols for a single slide. It needs to follow after the slide separator and be on the same line.
For example, to change a character set to ascii
for a single slide:
--- symbols: ascii
Or, to change the :bullet
symbol for a single slide:
--- symbols: {override: {bullet: x}}
Slideck displays Markdown
elements with a default style theme. Use
the :theme
configuration to change individual element styles. It takes
key/value pairs where the key is the element name, and the value is a single
style or list of styles. Please see the
tty-markdown
for a complete list of element names and their styles.
For example, to change em
, link
and list
element styles for every slide:
theme:
em: blue
link: cyan
list: magenta
Use the same configuration to change the theme for a single slide. It needs to follow after the slide separator and be on the same line.
For example, to change em
, link
and list
element styles for
a single slide:
--- theme: {em: blue, link: cyan, list: magenta}
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup
to install dependencies.
Then, run rake spec
to run the tests. You can also run bin/console
for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.
To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install
.
To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb
, and then
run bundle exec rake release
, which will create a git tag for the version,
push git commits and the created tag, and push the .gem
file to
rubygems.org.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/piotrmurach/slideck. This project is intended to be a safe, welcoming space for collaboration, and contributors are expected to adhere to the code of conduct.
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the GNU Affero General Public License v3.0.
Everyone interacting in the Slideck project's codebases, issue trackers, chat rooms and mailing lists is expected to follow the code of conduct.
Copyright (c) 2022 Piotr Murach. See LICENSE.txt for further details.