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= Warning =
This page has rarely been updated since 2006.
 
= Producing Your Presentations with ConTeXt =
This section of the wiki wants to get you started with presentations in
ConTeXt. There's lots of <s>amazing </s> stuff in the distribution already, such as
<s>truly amazing</s> 20-year-old [[Presentation Styles|prebuilt styles]] for presentations which
you can simply use by typing, e.g.
</texcode>
The styles are fully documented, and you can learn <s>amazing </s> tricks by looking at
the source and the documentation. However, for beginners, it might be easier to
start with a very basic presentation and then slowly add more fancy stuff. This
== Including Graphics ==
Everything works just the same way as graphics in usual documents. But if a presentation is your first document, let's repeat it once more here: <texcode>\externalfigureSee [[nameUsing_Graphics]][width=...]%% (probably surrounded by \placefigure)</texcode>
== Graphics with Metafun ==
= Post Processing Presentation =
Sometimes one wants to give a handout of the presentation, with multiple slides on one page. It is easy to do this using <{{cmd>|combinepages</cmd> }} or <code>texexec --pdfcombine</code>
To use <{{cmd>|combinepages</cmd>}}, suppose that your presentation is <code>slides.tex</code>. Create a file <code>handout.tex</code> with the following content
<texcode>
* The [[RawSteps]] module enables you to build a presentation step-by-step without the usage of JavaScript
* <s>[[Stepper]] which is buit in ConTeXt.</s>Broken
* The simple slides module [http://github.com/adityam/simple-slides/tree/master simple-slides] serves too.
* [[Presentation effects]], [[Presentation Styles]], [[SlideWithSteps]]
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