On Tue, Mar 05, 2013 at 10:53:42PM +0100, Andreas Leha wrote: > Nicolas Goaziou <n.goaz...@gmail.com> writes: > > Andreas Leha <andreas.l...@med.uni-goettingen.de> writes: > > > >> from a recent thread I learned about #+TOC (there's always something new > >> to learn about org mode). > >> > >> I'd like to use it in a beamer document. Here I find it hard to use > >> because it introduces its own frame. > >> > >> My question basically is: How is this supposed to be used in a beamer > >> doc? > >> (And would it not be easier if it did not introduce its own frame?) > > > > It seems useful to keep frame around TOC generated from toc:t option. > > But we could remove it from TOC generated from #+TOC keywords. > > > > Thanks for taking this further. Indeed, for the toc:t triggered TOC the > frame is absolutely useful.
I'm not sure what a \tableofcontents outside a frame would look like. Can someone show an example? I also had another thought; sometimes for long presentations, I use something like this: \AtBeginSubsection[]{ \ifthenelse{ \(\value{section}=1\)\AND\(\value{subsection}=1\) }{} { \begin{frame}<beamer> \frametitle{Outline} \tableofcontents[currentsubsection] \end{frame} } } At the moment I put it in as one long LaTeX_HEADER line. But would it be possible to leverage #+TOC: into having a similar effect? It might then provide a greater degree of control where you want the toc frame to appear. Cheers, -- Suvayu Open source is the future. It sets us free.