On 30.09.2014 13:50, Jean-Michel Pichavant wrote:
Hello list,

I'm currently writing a presentation to help my co-workers ramp up on new 
features of our tool (written in python (2.7)).

I have some difficulties presenting code in an efficient way (with some basic syntax 
highlights). I need to be catchy about the code I'm presenting otherwise the presentation 
will fail and I would be better saying to my co-workers "RTFM", cause there is 
a manual.

So I really need to make them realize the code I'm presenting will benefit them 
(they're not software engineers, python is just a tool, their expertise and 
focus is aimed at something else, don't blame them :) )

Right now the method I'm using is write the code in notepad++, use a plugin 
(NppExport) to copy paste code into powerpoint.
After using it a little bit, I'm really not satisfied with this method, it's 
expensive and all this copy paste stuff is driving me crazy. Not to mention 
that the syntax highlight from notepads renders like crap in powerpoint.

I wonder if some people in this list who have successfully presented python 
code have some tips about doing the proper way. Ned's presentations for pycons 
are to me one example of successful code presentation:
   - the layout is simple
   - the code and code output are clearly identified
   - a line of code can be highlighted while presenting

http://nedbatchelder.com/text/iter.html

I have access to powerpoint, or any tool under linux (I don't have access to 
Mac's stuff).

Right now I'm so not satisfied by my current method that I'm about to make the 
presentation showing the code from the file directly, alt-tabing between the 
slides and the code. At least it's cheap.

JM





-- IMPORTANT NOTICE:

The contents of this email and any attachments are confidential and may also be 
privileged. If you are not the intended recipient, please notify the sender 
immediately and do not disclose the contents to any other person, use it for 
any purpose, or store or copy the information in any medium. Thank you.


I can't answer your question, but thanks for the great presentation on iterables!

--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Reply via email to