Hi James,
On Thu, Oct 24, 2013 at 08:43:59AM +0800, James Harkins wrote:
On Oct 24, 2013 12:58 AM, Nicolas Goaziou n.goaz...@gmail.com wrote:
Headlines also support 'BEAMER_ACT' and 'BEAMER_OPT' properties. The
former is translated as an overlay/action specification, or a default
Hello,
James Harkins jamshar...@gmail.com writes:
Under Block environments and overlay specifications, where it discusses
custom environments, I would add:
~~
- Environment options may be given using the BEAMER_opt property. They will
be enclosed in square brackets and inserted where %o
On Oct 24, 2013 12:58 AM, Nicolas Goaziou n.goaz...@gmail.com wrote:
There are two things to consider: what belongs to the manual, and what
belongs to `org-beamer-environments-extra' docstring.
I think it is reasonable for the manual not to talk about %o, %r... but,
instead, simply point to
Per the beamer user guide, the syntax of the overlayarea environment is:
\begin{overlayarea}{area width}{area height}
environment contents
\end{overlayarea}
I can't figure out how to get the width and height in properly.
From the customize interface, I added overlayarea as follows:
Hello James,
James Harkins wrote:
Per the beamer user guide, the syntax of the overlayarea environment is:
\begin{overlayarea}{area width}{area height}
environment contents
\end{overlayarea}
I can't figure out how to get the width and height in properly.
Have a look at
On Mon, Oct 21, 2013 at 03:52:14PM +0800, James Harkins wrote:
Also, side note, [1] seems not to document BEAMER_OPT for environments
within a frame. Reading this page, you would think you could only use it for
frames. I had to dig into the source code to find how to populate %o.
hjh
Hello,
James Harkins jamshar...@gmail.com writes:
Per the beamer user guide, the syntax of the overlayarea environment is:
\begin{overlayarea}{area width}{area height}
environment contents
\end{overlayarea}
I can't figure out how to get the width and height in properly.
From the
On Oct 21, 2013 6:12 PM, Nicolas Goaziou n.goaz...@gmail.com wrote:
Optional arguments are in square brackets in LaTeX. Try %r instead, so
you can write:
*** {0.9\textwidth}{0.7\textheight} :B_overlayarea:
:PROPERTIES:
:BEAMER_env: overlayarea
:END:
Ah, OK, that's