A Hugo theme for Reveal.js that makes authoring and customization a breeze. With it, you can turn any properly-formatted Hugo content into a HTML presentation.
Using reveal-hugo, presentations with multiple slides can be created with just one markdown file, like so:
+++
title = "How to say hello"
+++
# English
Hello.
---
# Français
Salut.
---
# Español
Holá.
Just use ---
to split content into different slides.
You should be able to complete this section with no prior knowledge of Hugo or Reveal.js. At the end, you'll have a working presentation with instant reloading.
To start, install Hugo and create a new Hugo site:
$ hugo new site my-presentation
Change into the directory of the new site:
$ cd my-presentation
Add the reveal-hugo theme as a submodule in the themes directory:
$ git submodule add git@github.com:dzello/reveal-hugo.git themes/reveal-hugo
Open config.toml
and add the following contents:
theme = "reveal-hugo"
[outputFormats.Reveal]
baseName = "index"
mediaType = "text/html"
isHTML = true
This tells Hugo to use the reveal-hugo theme and it registers a new output format called "Reveal".
Next, create a file in content/_index.md
and add the following:
+++
title = "My presentation"
outputs = ["Reveal"]
+++
# Hello world!
This is my first slide.
Back on the command line, run:
$ hugo server
Navigate to http://localhost:1313/ and you should see your presentation.
To add more slides, just add content to _index.md
or create new markdown files in content/home
. Remember that each slide must be separated by ---
with blank lines above and below.
# Hello world!
This is my first slide.
---
# Hello Mars!
This is my second slide.
If you have an existing repository that was setup with the above steps, you have to pull in the theme submodule after cloning your repository using the following command:
git submodule update --init
The Usage guide is contained in the example presentation that lives in this repository in the exampleSite directory. You can access a live version at reveal-hugo.dzello.com.
Here's what the folder structure would look like with one root presentation and one section presentation.
- content
- home # special section for appending to root presentation
- body.md # appends to the root presentation
- conclusion.md # appends to the root presentation
- _index.md # beginning of the root presentation
- ted-talk
- _index.md # beginning of the ted talk presentation
- body.md # appends to the ted talk presentation
- conclusion.md # appends to the ted talk presentation
This will create two presentations, one at /
and one at /ted-talk/
. The order that slides are appended to each can be controlled by the weight
parameter specified in each file's front matter. The slides in _index.md
will always come first, though you don't have to put any slides in there if you want to.
reveal-hugo comes with a variety of shortcodes that help you take advantage of some very useful Reveal.js features.
Wrap any content in the fragment shortcode and it will appear incrementally. Great for bulleted lists where you want one bullet point at a a time to appear.
- {{% fragment %}}One{{% /fragment %}}
- {{% fragment %}}Two{{% /fragment %}}
- {{% fragment %}}Three{{% /fragment %}}
Like fragment but more terse - content is placed inline in a self-closing shortcode.
- {{< frag c="One" >}}
- {{< frag c="Two" >}}
- {{< frag c="Three" >}}
The slide shortcode lets you set custom HTML and Reveal.js attributes for each slide - things like id, class, transition, background just to name a few. The names are the same as Reveal.js but without the 'data-' prefix.
Add the shortcode above the slide content, below the ---
separator. Do not place content inside of the shortcode.
---
{{< slide id="hello" background="#FFF" transition="zoom" transition-speed="fast" >}}
# Hello, world!
---
Here's a list of documented slide attributes from the Reveal.js docs:
autoslide
state
background
background-color
background-image
background-size
background-position
background-repeat
background-video
background-video-loop
background-video-muted
background-interactive
background-iframe
background-transition
transition
(can have different in and out transitions)transition-speed
notes
(can also use the note shortcode)timing
You can also pass through your own, a data-
prefix will be added automatically to each one (except for id
and class
).
To create groups of slides that can be navigated vertically, surround your markdown with the section shortcode.
{{% section %}}
# Vertical slide 1
---
# Vertical slide 2
{{% /section %}}
Add speaker notes for each slide with the note shortcode.
{{% note %}}
Don't forget to thank the audience.
{{% /note %}}
💡 Tip: you can also add notes by adding a note
attribute to the slide shortcode.
Markdown surrounded by the markdown shortcode will not be rendered by Hugo but by Reveal.js itself. This is useful if you want to use some native Reveal.js markdown syntax that isn't supported by reveal-hugo.
{{% markdown %}}
# I'm rendered...
...by Reveal.js
{{% /markdown %}}
If you need to create fancier HTML for a slide than you can do with markdown, just add data-noprocess
to the <section> element.
<section data-noprocess>
<h1>Hello, world!</h1>
</section>
Sometimes you need to reuse a slide in the same presentation or across different presentations. reveal-hugo makes use of Hugo data templates to make both cases easy.
To create reusable slides, create a TOML (or JSON or YAML) file in your site's data directory. Give it a name that reflects its content or just slides.toml
. In that file, add a key for each reusable slide. The name should reflect the slide's content and the value should be the slide's markdown.
thankyou = '''
# Thank you!
Any questions?
'''
💡 Tip: TOML's multiline string syntax comes in handy here, note the '''.
Each key can contain one or more slides separated by ---
and newlines. That way you can create reusable sections.
thankyou = '''
# Thank you!
---
Any questions?
'''
To render a slide from a data template, use the slide shortcode with a content attribute:
{{% slide content="slides.thankyou" /%}}
The part before the "." is the name of the file in the data directory. The part after the dot is the key to look up in that file.
You can use all the additional slide shortcode attributes. They will be applied to every slide in the data template.
Customize the Reveal.js presentation by setting these values in config.toml
or the front matter of any presentation's _index.md
file.
reveal_hugo.theme
: The Reveal.js theme used; defaults to "black"reveal_hugo.custom_theme
: The path to a locally hosted Reveal.js theme in the static folderreveal_hugo.highlight_theme
: The highlight.js theme used; defaults to "default"reveal_hugo.reveal_cdn
: The location to load Reveal.js files from; defaults to thereveal-js
folder in the static directory to support offline development. To load from a CDN instead, set this value tohttps://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/reveal.js/3.7.0
or whatever CDN you prefer.reveal_hugo.highlight_cdn
: The location to load highlight.js files from; defaults tohttps://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/highlight.js/9.12.0
. For local development, change this to point to a file in the static directory.
This is how parameters will look in your config.toml
:
[params.reveal_hugo]
theme = "moon"
Or in the front matter of an _index.md
file:
[reveal_hugo]
theme = "moon"
Include any other attributes in those sections that you'd like to be fed as arguments to Reveal.initialize
in snakecase, so slide_number
instead of slideNumber
. Params are converted from snakecase to camelcase before passing to Reveal.js. This is necessary to maintain the proper case of the parameters.
Here's an example of configuring Reveal.js parameters alongside a theme and highlight.js theme:
[reveal_hugo]
theme = "moon"
highlight_theme = "solarized-dark"
slide_number = true
transition = "zoom"
See the extensive list of Reveal.js configuration options here.
If you have a custom reveal theme to use (in .css form), place it somewhere in your static folder. For example, if you have:
- static
- assets
- custom-theme.css
Then you will need to have this line in config.toml
[params.reveal_hugo]
reveal_hugo.custom_theme = "assets/custom-theme.css"
If you need to add something to the HTML layout, you can create partials that live at specific locations, depending on which presentation you want to customize and where you want the HTML inserted into the page.
Presentation | Before </head> | Before </body> | Before closing </div> of div.reveal |
---|---|---|---|
All | reveal-hugo/head.html | reveal-hugo/body.html | reveal-hugo/end.html |
Root | home/reveal-hugo/head.html | home/reveal-hugo/body.html | home/reveal-hugo/end.html |
Section | {section}/reveal-hugo/head.html | {section}/reveal-hugo/body.html | {section}/reveal-hugo/end.html |
This is the recommended way to add custom CSS and JavaScript to each presentation.
💡 Tip: In Hugo, partials live in the
layouts
folder:For example, if you have HTML that is to be placed before every presentation, this would be the structure:
- layouts - partials - reveal-hugo - head.html - body.html - end.html
If your Hugo site already has a theme but you'd like to create a presentation from some of its content, that's very easy. First, manually copy a few files out of this theme into a few of your site's directories:
cd my-hugo-site
git clone git@github.com:dzello/reveal-hugo.git themes/reveal-hugo
cd themes/reveal-hugo
cp -r layouts static ../../
Files and directories are named such that they shouldn't conflict with your existing content. Of course, you should double check before copying, especially the shortcodes which can't be put under a directory.
Next, add the Reveal output format to your site's config.toml
file
[outputFormats.Reveal]
baseName = "index"
mediaType = "text/html"
isHTML = true
Now you can add outputs = ["Reveal"]
to the front matter of any section's _index.md
file and that section's content will be combined into a presentation and written to index.html
. If you already have a index.html
page for that section, just change the baseName
above to reveal
and the presentation will be placed in a reveal.html
file instead.
Note: If you specify outputs = ["Reveal"]
for a single content file, you can prevent anything being generated for that file. This is handy if you other default layouts that would have created a regular HTML file from it. Only the list file is required for the presentation.
Tip: As of Hugo 0.42, Hugo has theme inheritence. You can avoid the file copying step above by adding "reveal-hugo"
to your site's array of themes.
These are some useful Reveal.js features and shortcuts.
- 's' - type 's' to enter speaker mode, which opens a separate window with a time and speaker notes
- 'o' - type 'o' to enter overview mode and scroll through slide thumbnails
- 'f' - type 'f' to go into full-screen mode
Here are a few useful Reveal.js-related tools:
- decktape for exporting a presentation as a PDF
- More revealjs themes including robot-lung and sunblind
Find many more on the Reveal.js wiki: Plugins, tools and hardware.
- 2018-08-03: The slide shortcode is now easier to use. An auto-closing version sits inside the slide instead of needing to surround its content and add a closing tag.
Contributions are very welcome. To run the example site in this repository locally, clone this repository and run:
hugo server -s exampleSite
or simply...
npm start