* Beamer latex export of included partial files @ 2011-08-07 14:33 LanX 2011-08-07 16:38 ` Rasmus 0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread From: LanX @ 2011-08-07 14:33 UTC (permalink / raw) To: emacs-orgmode [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 613 bytes --] Hi I'm working on a fairly large beamer presentation and the turn-around times from edit till pdf-view are fairly long. Are there any recommended ways to shorten that? I tried to split my org-file at the top level into a master and several others which are inserted at export-time via "#+include" The idea is that I can work on single chapters and speed up processing time. Unfortunately all beamer settings of the master get lost when I export one of the lower level files. Including the settings for each chapter from an individual file doesn't work. Is there a recommended way to do this? Cheers Rolf [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 692 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread
* Re: Beamer latex export of included partial files 2011-08-07 14:33 Beamer latex export of included partial files LanX @ 2011-08-07 16:38 ` Rasmus 2011-08-07 23:45 ` LanX 0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread From: Rasmus @ 2011-08-07 16:38 UTC (permalink / raw) To: emacs-orgmode LanX <lanx.perl@googlemail.com> writes: > Is there a recommended way to do this? From the beamer manual: ┏━━━┫ 4.3.3 Ways of Improving Compilation Speed ┃ ┃ While working on your presentation, it may sometimes be useful to TeX ┃ your .tex file quickly and have the presentation contain only the most ┃ important information. This is especially true if you have a slow ┃ machine. In this case, you can do several things to speed up the ┃ compilation. First, you can use the draft class option. ┃ ┃ #+begin_src latex ┃ \documentclass[draft]{beamer} ┃ #+end_src ┃ ┃ Causes the headlines, footlines, and sidebars to be replaced by gray ┃ rectangles (their sizes are still computed, though). Many other ┃ packages, including pgf and hyperref, also “speed up” when this option ┃ is given. ┃ ┃ Second, you can use the following command: ┃ #+begin_src latex ┃ \includeonlyframes{⟨frame label list⟩} ┃ #+end_src ┃ ┃ This command behaves a little bit like the \includeonly command: Only ┃ the frames mentioned in the list are included. All other frames are ┃ suppressed. Nevertheless, the section and subsection commands are still ┃ executed, so that you still have the correct navigation bars. By ┃ labeling the current frame as, say, current and then saying ┃ \includeonlyframes{current}, you can work on a single frame quickly. ┃ ┃ The ⟨frame label list⟩ is a comma-separated list (without spaces) of the ┃ names of frames that have been labeled. To label a frame, you must pass ┃ the option label=⟨name⟩ to the \frame command or frame environment. ┃ ┃ Example: ┃ #+begin_src latex ┃ \includeonlyframes{example1,example3} ┃ \frame[label=example1] ┃ {This frame will be included. } ┃ \frame[label=example2] ┃ {This frame will not be included. } ┃ \frame{This frame will not be included.} ┃ \againframe{example1} % Will be included ┃ #+end_latex ┗━━━ -- Sent from my Emacs ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread
* Re: Beamer latex export of included partial files 2011-08-07 16:38 ` Rasmus @ 2011-08-07 23:45 ` LanX 0 siblings, 0 replies; 3+ messages in thread From: LanX @ 2011-08-07 23:45 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Rasmus; +Cc: emacs-orgmode [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2212 bytes --] Thanks I will try it out. 2011/8/7 Rasmus <rasmus@gmx.us> > LanX <lanx.perl@googlemail.com> writes: > > > Is there a recommended way to do this? > > From the beamer manual: > > ┏━━━┫ 4.3.3 Ways of Improving Compilation Speed ┃ > ┃ While working on your presentation, it may sometimes be useful to TeX > ┃ your .tex file quickly and have the presentation contain only the most > ┃ important information. This is especially true if you have a slow > ┃ machine. In this case, you can do several things to speed up the > ┃ compilation. First, you can use the draft class option. > ┃ > ┃ #+begin_src latex > ┃ \documentclass[draft]{beamer} > ┃ #+end_src > ┃ > ┃ Causes the headlines, footlines, and sidebars to be replaced by gray > ┃ rectangles (their sizes are still computed, though). Many other > ┃ packages, including pgf and hyperref, also “speed up” when this option > ┃ is given. > ┃ > ┃ Second, you can use the following command: > ┃ #+begin_src latex > ┃ \includeonlyframes{⟨frame label list⟩} > ┃ #+end_src > ┃ > ┃ This command behaves a little bit like the \includeonly command: Only > ┃ the frames mentioned in the list are included. All other frames are > ┃ suppressed. Nevertheless, the section and subsection commands are still > ┃ executed, so that you still have the correct navigation bars. By > ┃ labeling the current frame as, say, current and then saying > ┃ \includeonlyframes{current}, you can work on a single frame quickly. > ┃ > ┃ The ⟨frame label list⟩ is a comma-separated list (without spaces) of the > ┃ names of frames that have been labeled. To label a frame, you must pass > ┃ the option label=⟨name⟩ to the \frame command or frame environment. > ┃ > ┃ Example: > ┃ #+begin_src latex > ┃ \includeonlyframes{example1,example3} > ┃ \frame[label=example1] > ┃ {This frame will be included. } > ┃ \frame[label=example2] > ┃ {This frame will not be included. } > ┃ \frame{This frame will not be included.} > ┃ \againframe{example1} % Will be included > ┃ #+end_latex > ┗━━━ > > -- > Sent from my Emacs > > > [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 2679 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2011-08-07 23:45 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 3+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2011-08-07 14:33 Beamer latex export of included partial files LanX 2011-08-07 16:38 ` Rasmus 2011-08-07 23:45 ` LanX
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