- Overview
- Rendering
- Display Modes
- Incremental Bullets
- Appearance and Style
- Slide Transitions
- Slide Backgrounds
- 2-D Presentations
- Reveal Options
- Figure Options
- MathJax Equations
- Document Dependencies
- Reveal Plugins
- Advanced Customization
- Shared Options
This repository provides an R Markdown custom format for reveal.js HTML presentations.
You can use this format in R Markdown documents by installing this package as follows:
install.packages("revealjg", type = "source")
To create a reveal.js presentation
from R Markdown you specify the revealjs_presentation
output format in
the front-matter of your document. You can create a slide show broken up
into sections by using the #
and ##
heading tags (you can also
create a new slide without a header using a horizontal rule (----
).
For example here’s a simple slide show:
---
title: "Habits"
author: John Doe
date: March 22, 2005
output: revealjg::revealjs_presentation
---
# In the morning
## Getting up
- Turn off alarm
- Get out of bed
## Breakfast
- Eat eggs
- Drink coffee
# In the evening
## Dinner
- Eat spaghetti
- Drink wine
## Going to sleep
- Get in bed
- Count sheep
Depending on your use case, there are 3 ways you can render the presentation.
- RStudio
- R console
- Terminal (e.g., bash)
When creating the presentation in RStudio, there will be a Knit
button
right below the source tabs. By default, it will render the current
document and place the rendered HTML
file in the same directory as the
source file, with the same name.
Note: Unlike the the other slideshow outputs, the slideshow viewer popup
from RStudio will be blank, to view the slide show click the open in browser
button, and the slide show will render in your default web
browser.
The Knit
button is actually calling the rmarkdown::render()
function. So, to render the document within the R console:
rmarkdown::render('my_reveal_presentation.Rmd')
There are many other output tweaks you can use by directly calling
render
. You can read up on the
documentation
for more details.
When you need the presentation to be rendered from the command line:
Rscript -e "rmarkdown::render('my_reveal_presentation.Rmd')"
The following single character keyboard shortcuts enable alternate display modes:
-
'f'
enable fullscreen mode -
'o'
enable overview mode
Pressing Esc
exits all of these modes.
You can render bullets incrementally by adding the incremental
option:
---
output:
revealjg::revealjs_presentation:
incremental: true
---
If you want to render bullets incrementally for some slides but not others you can use this syntax:
> - Eat eggs
> - Drink coffee
There are several options that control the appearance of revealjs presentations:
-
theme
specifies the theme to use for the presentation (available themes are “default”, “simple”, “sky”, “beige”, “serif”, “solarized”, “blood”, “moon”, “night”, “black”, “league” or “white”). -
highlight
specifies the syntax highlighting style. Supported styles include “default”, “tango”, “pygments”, “kate”, “monochrome”, “espresso”, “zenburn”, and “haddock”. Pass null to prevent syntax highlighting. -
center
specifies whether you want to vertically center content on slides (this defaults to false). -
smart
indicates whether to produce typographically correct output, converting straight quotes to curly quotes,---
to em-dashes,--
to en-dashes, and...
to ellipses. Note thatsmart
is enabled by default.
For example:
---
output:
revealjg::revealjs_presentation:
theme: sky
highlight: pygments
center: true
---
You can use the transition
and background_transition
options to
specify the global default slide transition style:
-
transition
specifies the visual effect when moving between slides. Available transitions are “default”, “fade”, “slide”, “convex”, “concave”, “zoom” or “none”. -
background_transition
specifies the background transition effect when moving between full page slides. Available transitions are “default”, “fade”, “slide”, “convex”, “concave”, “zoom” or “none”.
For example:
---
output:
revealjg::revealjs_presentation:
transition: fade
---
You can override the global transition for a specific slide by using the data-transition attribute, for example:
## Use a zoom transition {data-transition="zoom"}
## Use a faster speed {data-transition-speed="fast"}
You can also use different in and out transitions for the same slide, for example:
## Fade in, Slide out {data-transition="slide-in fade-out"}
## Slide in, Fade out {data-transition="fade-in slide-out"}
Slides are contained within a limited portion of the screen by default to allow them to fit any display and scale uniformly. You can apply full page backgrounds outside of the slide area by adding a data-background attribute to your slide header element. Four different types of backgrounds are supported: color, image, video and iframe. Below are a few examples.
## CSS color background {data-background=#ff0000}
## Full size image background {data-background="background.jpeg"}
## Video background {data-background-video="background.mp4"}
## Embed a web page as a background {data-background-iframe="https://example.com"}
Backgrounds transition using a fade animation by default. This can be
changed to a linear sliding transition by specifying the
background-transition: slide
. Alternatively you can set
data-background-transition on any slide with a background to override
that specific transition.
You can use the slide_level
option to specify which level of heading
will be used to denote individual slides. If slide_level
is 2 (the
default), a two-dimensional layout will be produced, with level 1
headers building horizontally and level 2 headers building vertically.
For example:
# Horizontal Slide 1
## Vertical Slide 1
## Vertical Slide 2
# Horizontal Slide 2
With this layout horizontal navigation will proceed directly from “Horizontal Slide 1” to “Horizontal Slide 2”, with vertical navigation to “Vertical Slide 1”, etc. presented as an option on “Horizontal Slide 1”.
Reveal.js has many additional options to configure it’s behavior. You
can specify any of these options using reveal_options
, for example:
---
title: "Habits"
output:
revealjg::revealjs_presentation:
self_contained: false
reveal_options:
slideNumber: true
previewLinks: true
---
You can find documentation on the various available Reveal.js options here: https://github.com/hakimel/reveal.js#configuration.
There are a number of options that affect the output of figures within reveal.js presentations:
-
fig_width
andfig_height
can be used to control the default figure width and height (7x5 is used by default) -
fig_retina
Specifies the scaling to perform for retina displays (defaults to 2, which currently works for all widely used retina displays). Note that this only takes effect if you are using knitr >= 1.5.21. Set tonull
to prevent retina scaling. -
fig_caption
controls whether figures are rendered with captions
For example:
---
title: "Habits"
output:
revealjg::revealjs_presentation:
fig_width: 7
fig_height: 6
fig_caption: true
---
By default MathJax scripts are included in
reveal.js presentations for rendering LaTeX and MathML equations. You
can use the mathjax
option to control how MathJax is included:
-
Specify “default” to use an https URL from the official MathJax CDN.
-
Specify “local” to use a local version of MathJax (which is copied into the output directory). Note that when using “local” you also need to set the
self_contained
option to false. -
Specify an alternate URL to load MathJax from another location.
-
Specify null to exclude MathJax entirely.
For example, to use a local copy of MathJax:
---
title: "Habits"
output:
revealjg::revealjs_presentation:
mathjax: local
self_contained: false
---
To use a self-hosted copy of MathJax:
---
title: "Habits"
output:
revealjg::revealjs_presentation:
mathjax: "http://example.com/mathjax/MathJax.js?config=TeX-AMS-MML_HTMLorMML"
---
To exclude MathJax entirely:
---
title: "Habits"
output:
revealjg::revealjs_presentation:
mathjax: null
---
By default R Markdown produces standalone HTML files with no external
dependencies, using data: URIs to incorporate the contents of linked
scripts, stylesheets, images, and videos. This means you can share or
publish the file just like you share Office documents or PDFs. If you’d
rather keep dependencies in external files you can specify
self_contained: false
. For example:
---
title: "Habits"
output:
revealjg::revealjs_presentation:
self_contained: false
---
Note that even for self contained documents MathJax is still loaded
externally (this is necessary because of it’s size). If you want to
serve MathJax locally then you should specify mathjax: local
and
self_contained: false
.
One common reason keep dependencies external is for serving R Markdown
documents from a website (external dependencies can be cached separately
by browsers leading to faster page load times). In the case of serving
multiple R Markdown documents you may also want to consolidate dependent
library files (e.g. Bootstrap, MathJax, etc.) into a single directory
shared by multiple documents. You can use the lib_dir
option to do
this, for example:
---
title: "Habits"
output:
revealjg::revealjs_presentation:
self_contained: false
lib_dir: libs
---
You can enable various reveal.js plugins using the reveal_plugins
option. Plugins currently supported include:
Plugin | Description |
---|---|
notes | Present per-slide notes in a separate browser window. |
zoom | Zoom in and out of selected content with Alt+Click. |
search | Find a text string anywhere in the slides and show the next occurrence to the user. |
chalkboard | Include handwritten notes within a presentation. |
menu | Include a navigation menu within a presentation. |
Note that the use of plugins requires that the self_contained
option
be set to false. For example, this presentation includes both the
“notes” and “search” plugins:
---
title: "Habits"
output:
revealjs::revealjs_presentation:
self_contained: false
reveal_plugins: ["notes", "search"]
---
You can specify additional options for the chalkboard
and menu
plugins using reveal_options
, for example:
---
title: "Habits"
output:
revealjs::revealjs_presentation:
self_contained: false
reveal_plugins: ["chalkboard", "menu"]
reveal_options:
chalkboard:
theme: whiteboard
toggleNotesButton: false
menu:
side: right
---
You can do more advanced customization of output by including additional
HTML content or by replacing the core pandoc template entirely. To
include content in the document header or before/after the document body
you use the includes
option as follows:
---
title: "Habits"
output:
revealjg::revealjs_presentation:
includes:
in_header: header.html
before_body: doc_prefix.html
after_body: doc_suffix.html
---
If there are pandoc features you want to use that lack equivalents in
the YAML options described above you can still use them by passing
custom pandoc_args
. For example:
---
title: "Habits"
output:
revealjg::revealjs_presentation:
pandoc_args: [
"--title-prefix", "Foo",
"--id-prefix", "Bar"
]
---
Documentation on all available pandoc arguments can be found in the pandoc user guide.
If you want to specify a set of default options to be shared by multiple
documents within a directory you can include a file named _output.yaml
within the directory. Note that no YAML delimiters or enclosing output
object are used in this file. For example:
_output.yaml
revealjg::revealjs_presentation:
theme: sky
transition: fade
highlight: pygments
All documents located in the same directory as _output.yaml
will
inherit it’s options. Options defined explicitly within documents will
override those specified in the shared options file.