30-second Slideshows for Hackers
Cleaver turns this:
title: Basic Example
author:
name: "Jordan Scales"
twitter: "@jdan"
url: "http://jordanscales.com"
output: basic.html
controls: true
--
# Cleaver 101
## A first look at quick HTML presentations
--
### A textual example
Content can be written in **Markdown!** New lines no longer need two angle brackets.
This will be in a separate paragraph
--
### A list of things
* Item 1
* Item B
* Item gamma
No need for multiple templates!
Into this:
Get it on NPM:
npm install -g cleaver
And run it like so:
cleaver path/to/something.md
Cleaver is a one-stop shop for generating HTML presentations in record time. Using some spiced up markdown, you can produce good-looking, interactive presentations without writing any code or placing a measly textbox.
All you need to do is write some blocks of markdown, separated by --
on its own line and include metadata at the top.
Let's walk through the above example piece by piece.
title: Basic Example
author:
name: "Jordan Scales"
twitter: "@jdan"
url: "http://jordanscales.com"
output: basic.html
controls: true
The first section of any cleaver document is the metadata. Currently cleaver supports the following fields.
- title: The title of the slideshow
- author
- name: Your full name
- url: A url to your website
- twitter: Your twitter handle
- style: An optional stylesheet to load
- output: A location to save the rendered document (default: FILENAME-cleaver.html)
- controls: Option whether or not arrow buttons should be included (default: true)
- agenda: Option whether or not to insert an agenda slide (similar to a table of contents) after the title (default: false)
If author is included, the following slide will be automatically inserted at the end of your presentation:
# Cleaver 101
## A first look at quick HTML presentations
h1 and h2 elements (prefaced with # and ## respectively), will automatically include padding to render a title slide.
### A list of things
* Item 1
* Item B
* Item gamma
No need for multiple templates!
Since slides are written in Markdown, you can include things like lists, images, and arbitrary HTML.
h3 tags (prefaced ###
) are automatically given a bottom border to
represent a slide title.
To navigate the slideshow:
- reverse: H, J, LEFT, DOWN, and Backspace
- forward: K, L, ENTER, UP, RIGHT, and Space
Or click the buttons
- Fork it
- Clone it
- Install dependencies (
npm install
) - Checkout a release branch (
git checkout -b feature/cool-wordart
) - Make changes, commit, and push
- Open a pull request!
With <3,