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Jonathan Hodgson 1df85219c9 Write slides about merge with conflict 5 years ago
bin A lot of work on the presentation 5 years ago
code-examples Write slides about merge with conflict 5 years ago
shell Write slides about merge with conflict 5 years ago
.gitignore More work on presentation + improves auto images 5 years ago
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greeting.py A lot of work on the presentation 5 years ago
main.latex Write slides about merge with conflict 5 years ago

README.md

Git Presentation

This is a presentation about Git.

Build

To build it, you will need make, pdflatex and ansi-to-svg and inkscape.

To build the main pd, run:

make main.pdf

To build with speaker notes:

make with-notes.pdf

To only build the speaker notes:

make only-notes.pdf

Auto Images

The build system will generate certain types of graphics for the presentation as part of the build system. The resultant files will always go in the auto-images folder. As a result, this folder is not under version control.

In latex, all you need to do is

\includegraphics[<options>]{auto-<type>-<file>}

The types are documented below:

XKCD

What is a presentation without an xkcd comic?

\includegraphics[<options>]{auto-xkcd-<id>.png}

If the above is included in the latex document, the XKCD comic with the specified ID will be downloaded and embedded in the pdf.

Shell Output

I am still not aware of aware of a reliable way to include ansi coloured shell output into a latex document. I also don't want to include loads of high-res screenshots in my Git repo.

The work around I have come up with is to save the raw ansi output to a wile in shell-output. This normally involves forcing an application to output in colour:

git -c color.status=always status > shell-output/git-status.out
\includegraphics[<options>]{auto-shell-<filename>.pdf}
%E.g.
\includegraphics[<options>]{auto-shell-git-status.pdf}

The build system will convert the ansi output into an embeddable PDF that LaTeX will embed.