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The Sly Markup Language

Slydes processes Sly markup, which describes a presentation.

Comments

Comments start with # and ignore the rest of the line

Variable Declaration

You can define variables with Sly, the syntax is pretty simple:

let variableName = 1;
mut otherVarName = "f";

A variable declaration is composed of three parts: mutability binding, identifier, and an initial value.

A variable can either be bound as immutable (let) or mutable (mut). Immutable variables cannot be reassigned after initialization whereas mutables ones can.

The identifier for the variable must start with a letter but can contain any alphanumeric character subsequently.

The possible value types for a variable will be outlined in the Data Types section.

All variable declarations must end with a semicolon.

You can use a variable in an attribute declaration or possibly in another variable declaration.

let variable1 = "hello";
let variable2 = variable1;

Variables are scoped to the slides or blocks that defined them and you may refer to variables from the enclosing scope(s).

Variables may be shadowed by redeclaring them.

Data Types

Sly supports some very (very) basic data types.

  • string
    • Any set of character between quotes.
    • Ex: "Hello World!"
  • integer
    • An unsigned, eight-bit integer (intentionally limited, subject to change).
    • Ex: 42
  • color literal
    • A compound type representing an RGB or RGBA color value.
    • Trailing comma optional
    • Ex: (255, 0, 0)
    • Ex: (255, 255, 0, 255,)

In the future we may support these types as well:

  • larger integral values
  • floating point values
  • booleans
  • multiline strings

Slide Scopes

These signify the start of a new slide.

slide exampleSlide {
    let foo = "red";
    self.backgroundColor = foo;

    block title {
        ---Hello!---
    }
}

You may define variables and blocks.

Sly allows you to control specific characteristics of the current slide using an attribute declaration. Currently, slides support the following attributes:

  • backgroundColor
    • the background color of the slide. Can be either the name of a color (ex: "black") or a color literal.

Sly also supports a limited form of inheritance for slides, where the child slide will copy all the attributes defined on the parent slide.

slide foo {
    self.backgroundColor = "red";
}

slide bar : foo {
    # The background color of this slide will start off as red
}

A slide scope must be defined at the top level.

Block Scopes

This represents a unique, styled section of text.

block foo {
    ---Boo!---
}

The block must end with exactly one text declaration.

The text declaration can be multi-line or single-line, up to you!

block foo {
    ---
    This is my
        Second line of text
    ---
}

Blocks also have attributes. The following attributes are currently supported:

  • font
    • the font of a text block. Must be a string value.
  • fontColor
    • the font color of a text block. Can be either the name of a color (ex: "black") or a color literal.
  • fontSize
    • the font size of a text block. Must be an integer value.
  • justify
    • the justification for a text block. Accepted values are "left", "center", or "right".

Like slide scopes, you can use inheritance to copy styles between blocks in the same scope.

block foo {
    self.font = "Fira Code";
    self.fontColor = "red";

    ---Hello!---
}

block bar : foo {
    self.fontColor = "blue";

    ---Boo!---
}

A block scope must be defined within a slide scope.

Macros

To cut down on repetition, Sly provides macro functionality.

let green = (0, 255, 0);

macro themeMacro {
    let foo = "hello";
    self.font = "Fira Code";

    # Can refer to outside variables
    self.fontColor = green;

    # Variables only need to be instantiated
    # by the time the macro is called, not when
    # it is defined
    self.fontSize = defaultFontSize;
}

slide example {
    let defaultFontSize = 14;

    # Will expand to the statement block originally
    # defined in the macro
    $themeMacro();
}

Macros are very basic in Sly. When called they simply expand to the statement block originally provided.

There is no concept of scope within a macro as each macro expansion is inlined.