NAME Vroom::Vroom - Slide Shows in Vim SYNOPSIS > mkdir MySlides # Make a Directory for Your Slides > cd MySlides # Go In There > vim slides.vroom # Write Some Slides > vroom --vroom # Show Your Slides DESCRIPTION Ever given a Slide Show and needed to switch over to the shell? Now you don't ever have to switch again. You're already there. Vroom lets you create your slides in a single file using a Wiki-like style, much like Spork and Sporx do. The difference is that your slides don't compile to HTML or JavaScript or XUL. They get turned into a set of files that begin with '0', like '03' or '07c' or '05b.pl'. The slides are named in alpha order. That means you can bring them all into a Vim session with the command: "vim 0*". "vroom --vroom" does exactly that. Vroom creates a file called "./.vimrc" with helpful key mappings for navigating a slideshow. See "KEY MAPPINGS" below. Please note that you will need the following line in your "$HOME/.vimrc" file in order to pick up the local ".vimrc" file. set exrc Vroom takes advantage of Vim's syntax highlighting. It also lets you run slides that contain code. Since Vim is an editor, you can change your slides during the show. COMMAND USAGE Vroom has a few command line options: vroom Just running vroom will compiles 'slides.vroom' into slide files. vroom --vroom Compile and start vim show. vroom --clean Clean up all the compiled output files. INPUT FORMAT Here is an example slides.vroom file: ---- config # These are YAML settings for Vroom title: My Spiffy Slideshow height: 84 width: 20 # skip: 12 # Skip 12 slides. Useful when making slides. ---- center My Presentation by Ingy ---- == Stuff I care about: * Foo +* Bar +* Baz ---- perl,i10 # Perl code indented 10 spaces use Vroom::Vroom; print "Hello World"; ---- center THE END A line that starts with '==' is a header line. It will be centered. Lines that begin with a '+' cause vroom to split the slide there, causing an animation effect. CONFIGURATION OPTIONS Each slide can have one or more configuration options. Options are a comma separated list that follow the '----' header for a slide. Like this: ---- center ---- html ---- perl,i20 ---- config ---- skip skip Ignore the following slide completely. center Center the contents of the slide. i## 'i' followed by a number means to indent the contents by the number of characters. perl,ruby,python,js,yaml,make,html Specifies that the slide is one of those syntaxen, and that the appropriate file extension will be used, thus causing vim to syntax highlight the slide. config The slide is really a yaml configuration. It will not be displayed in the presentation, but will tell vroom what to do from that point forward. You can use more than one config slide in your "slides.vroom" file. You can specify the following confguration options in a config slide: title The title of your presentation. height The number of lines in the terminal you plan to use when presenting the show. Used for centering the content. width The number of columns in the terminal you plan to use when presenting the show. Used for centering the content. list_indent Auto detect slides that have lists in them, and indent them by the specified number of columns. KEY MAPPINGS These are the standard key mappings specified in the local ".vimrc". Advance one slide. Go back one slide. Run current slide as Perl. Quit Vroom. CUSTOM CONFIGURATION You can create a file called ".vroom/vimrc" in your home directory. If vroom sees this file, it will append it onto every local ".vimrc" file it creates. Use this file to specify your own custom vim settings for all your vroom presentations. NOTE Vroom is called Vroom but the module is Vroom::Vroom because the CPAN shell sometimes thinks Vroom is Tim Vroom, and it refuses to install him. Use a shell command like this to install Vroom: sudo cpan Vroom::Vroom AUTHOR Ingy döt Net COPYRIGHT Copyright (c) 2008. Ingy döt Net. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See http://www.perl.com/perl/misc/Artistic.html