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Overplay 7
Overplay 7












overplay 7

Next the \textcolor command which puts it in the specified colour, then \alert which puts the text in red by default and finally the \structure command which formats the text in a way that indicates the presentation's structure. Which will produce text like this on the first slide:įirst the \textbf command which makes the text bold, then \textit which puts the text in italics, then \textsl which make it slanted, \textrm which uses the roman font family, \textsf which uses the sans serif font family but this doesn't change anything because we are already using this font. For example, by entering the \pause command before every entry in a list we can reveal the list point-by-point: The simplest way to do this is to use the \pause command. We’re using ::before pseudo-element to create the overlay effect. You can change the default background color or create custom animated overlay on hover together with Torus Kit effects. overlay class applies a default background-color: 000 with opacity: 0.5. Often when when doing a presentation we'll want to reveal parts of a frame one after the other. They’re usually used on hero sections, cards, jumbotrons, etc. In this post we're going to look at animating our slides. In the previous post we looked at adding some more interesting content into our presentation. However, much of the content is still relevant and teaches you some basic LaTeX-skills and expertise that will apply across all platforms. These tutorials were first published on the original ShareLateX blog site during August 2013 consequently, today's editor interface (Overleaf) has changed considerably due to the development of ShareLaTeX and the subsequent merger of ShareLaTeX and Overleaf.

Overplay 7 series#

This five-part series of articles uses a combination of video and textual descriptions to teach the basics of creating a presentation using the LaTeX beamer package.














Overplay 7