Instrumenta
marp
Instrumenta | marp | |
---|---|---|
7 | 22 | |
217 | 7,145 | |
- | 1.4% | |
0.0 | 4.0 | |
about 1 year ago | 11 days ago | |
VBA | TypeScript | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
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Instrumenta
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Best tools or addons for slide decks
If you don't want to spend money and just need to modify standard items like text/shapes/tables, I like the feature set of Instrumenta (https://github.com/iappyx/Instrumenta)
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What software do you use to make presentations?
Two PowerPoint add ons I’ve used post PhD, where the balance of style vs substance is more tilted towards the former, are Poweruser (freemium) and Instrumenta (free, https://github.com/iappyx/Instrumenta). Helps with a lot of the formatting tweaking and PowerUser includes a bunch of nice templates as well as letting you make your own templates from existing slides
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It's 2022...
Get Instrumenta if your firm doesn't have a decent PPT plugin.
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Instrumenta Power Point Add In
Unfortunately like Steve pointed out the add has been flagged by MS Defender in the past (false positive). I've reported these all to Microsoft (see: here and here).
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What software/plugins do you use that you couldn't live without?
Instrumenta, the poor man's PPT plugin when your firm doesn't have one. Found it linked on this sub before and quite pleased with it.
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Power Point Add Ins
The best free add-on for PowerPoint that I have come across is called Instrumenta, which is a free and open source consulting toolbar: https://github.com/iappyx/Instrumenta
- Where can I find good and free ppt macros?
marp
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Ask HN: What products other than Obsidian share the file over app philosophy?
> Recently I've been using iAPresenter, which lets you build presentations using Markdown.
Save yourself the $90 for a one-time license and use Marp[1], for free, instead.
[1] https://marp.app/
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Marp: A Markdown Presentation App That Simplifies Your Tech Talks
--- theme: gaia _class: lead paginate: true backgroundColor: #fff backgroundImage: url('https://marp.app/assets/hero-background.svg') --- ![bg left:40% 80%](https://marp.app/assets/marp.svg) # **Marp** Markdown Presentation Ecosystem https://marp.app/ --- # How to write slides Split pages by horizontal ruler (`---`). It's very simple! :satisfied: --- # Slide 1 foobar --- # Slide 2 foobar
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Sent – simple plaintext presentation tool
I've done a number of text-based slide presentations with `marp` and I've been pleased with the results. Mostly it's just plain markdown slides but if you want to get into the weeds with HTML and have a 2-column slide or something you can do it. https://marp.app/
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Ask HN: What are some unpopular technologies you wish people knew more about?
Just want to +1 this, and also add a twist. The Sphinx community also has a great extension called hieroglyph, which lets you use rST directives to build slide presentations which also double as single-page HTML notes documents.
https://hieroglyph.readthedocs.io/en/latest/getting-started....
This meant I could first write a blog post on learning Clojure as a Pythonista[1]; then turn some code samples and tables and images into slides I could present on my laptop or desktop[2]; and then finally publish a public notes document that audience members could use to easily study or copy-paste code examples[3]. And this is generated HTML all the way down! And, of course, I could version control and render the .rst file powering the slides / notes / etc. in GitHub.
Note: the slides do not play well on mobile. You are meant to use keyboard arrows to advance and tap “t” to switch into tiled mode (aka slide sorter) and “c” to open a presenter console. The slides are powered by a fork of html5slides, which will look familiar if you’ve seen the JS/CSS slide template that Go core developers use in https://go.dev/talks (they generate those with “go present,” a different tool, though).
I have also used a similar-in-spirit tool called marp (https://marp.app) for generating technical slides from source, but the output and functionality was never quite as good as rST + Sphinx + hieroglyph. The big advantages to marp: Markdown is used as the source, some tooling allows for VSCode preview, and PDF export is fully supported alongside HTML slides.
I have a soft spot for Sphinx, not only because it was responsible for so much great documentation of Python open source libraries (including Python’s own standard library docs at python.org), but also because the first comprehensive technical docs I ever wrote for a successful commercial product were written in Sphinx. And the Sphinx-powered docs stayed thar way for a ridiculously long time before being moved to a CMS.
[1]: https://amontalenti.com/2014/11/02/clojonic
[2]: https://amontalenti.com/pub/clojonic/
[3]: https://amontalenti.com/pub/clojonic/notes/
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Pysentation – The Python Presentation
We've been using a non-commercial alternative, marp, at work to great success and make slides where PowerPoint usually sucks: code blocks (we present on our data format frequently).
https://marp.app/
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Tutorial: Marp for VS Code
Marp: Markdown Presentation Ecosystem
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Why won't students use Microsoft Office products?
for video, photo, and audio editing, I use open source software. even for slides, I recently started using an open source solution (https://marp.app for anyone curious!).
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My repository of the week: Marp - Create your slides with Markdown!
Upsi! Here is the link: https://github.com/marp-team/marp
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How to create a normal text structure when copying from PDFs
I used to do this all the time and used a program called Marp https://marp.app/. I haven't done much recently so there may be a better option out now.
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What software do you use to make presentations?
I haven't actually tried it yet, but I'm curious about Marp (Markdown Presentation Environment).
What are some alternatives?
PPspliT - A PowerPoint add-in that splits slides according to slideshow-time animation effects
lookatme - An interactive, terminal-based markdown presenter