Provided by: wiki2beamer_0.10.0-4_all bug

NAME

       wiki2beamer - convert wiki-formatted text to latex-beamer code

SYNOPSIS

       wiki2beamer [OPTION...] [FILE...]

DESCRIPTION

       FILE
           the text-file(s) to be processed

       -h, --help
           show a short usage help

       --version
           show version information

       -o,--output  FILE
           write output to FILE instead of stdout

USAGE

       Usually you want to pipe the output of wiki2beamer into a file:

       wiki2beamer footalk.txt > footalk.tex

       If called with multiple input files, wiki2beamer processes them in order with their
       content being simply concatenated. If called without any input file, wiki2beamer will
       attempt to read input from STDIN. If no input files are supplied and nothing is available
       on STDIN, wiki2beamer prints its usage message and exits.

       If an error occurs, wiki2beamer returns a return code other then 0.

SYNTAX

       Wiki2beamer has it’s own wiki-syntax which (evolved without much of a concept ;) and) is
       described below. Everything that is unknown to wiki2beamer will be passed through to the
       LaTeX output (unless inside special environments).

   Overall Structure
       A wiki2beamer txt file can consist of two sections: the head and the body. The head is
       optional and is an autotemplate environment. The body contains the content of the
       document. If the head (autotemplate) is not given, then only the code for the body will be
       generated and can be included into a manually crafted LaTeX template file.

   Managing Input
       You can split input to wiki2beamer into multiple files. This helps to keep things apart
       and avoids conflicts. There are two ways to split input. The first is to use multiple
       input files which wiki2beamer will read and process in order as if they were one
       concatenated file. The second is to use the >>>include<<< syntax.

       >>>includefile<<<
           Include the file named includefile at this line. Works recursively. Endless recursion
           will be detected and treated as an error. Including files doesn’t work inside [nowiki]
           and [code] environments (see below).

   Structuring the Presentation
       == sectionname ==
           opens a section called sectionname

       == longsectionname ==[shortname]
           opens a section called longsectionname, passing the parameter shortname to latex

       === subsectname ===
           opens a subsection called subsectname

       === longsubsectname ===[shortname]
           opens a subsection called longsubsectname, passing the parameter shortname to latex

       ==== frametitle ====_
           opens a frame with the title frametitle

       ==== frametitle ====[param]
           opens a frame with the title frametitle, passes frame parameters like t, fragile,
           verbatim etc. to latex

       !==== frametitle ====[param]
           the ! added in front of a frame, selects a frame for exclusive generation. It makes
           wiki2beamer skip all frames that are not selected. You can select multiple frames.
           This can speed up the edit-compile-view cycle massively.

       Sectioning commands work only at the beginning of a line.

   Lists (Bullets/Enumerations)
       * text
           create a bullet (itemize) with text

       *<onslide> text
           create a bullet (itemize) with text that only appears on the specified slides
           (onslide)

       # text
           create a numbered item (enumerate) with text

       #<onslide> text
           create a numbered item (enumerate) with text that only appears on the specified slides
           (onslide)

       Cascaded lists, mixed ordered and unordered items:

            * This is a crazy list.
            *# It contains different items.
            *# In different formats.
            *** On different levels.
            ***<2-> which are animated
            *<3-> Quite a lot of fun.
            **<4-> Isn't it?

   Environments
       LaTeX knows many environments, some of which are as simple as \begin{center} \end{center},
       others are more complicated. To use these in a more wiki-like fashion, use <[name] to open
       and [name]> to close environments. It will be simply converted to \begin{name} and
       end{name}.

       Warning

       No parsing is done. The user is responsible for closing any opened environment.
       Environment-tags are only recognized at the beginning of a line.

   Special Environments
       Unlike standard environments, some environment names are recognized by wiki2beamer. These
       are: nowiki, code, autotemplate and frame. If wiki2beamer detects one of these it will do
       some advanced parsing, which can even fail with a syntax error.

   Autotemplate
       Autotemplate can be used at the beginning of a beamer .txt file. It will create the
       required LaTeX headers to compile the content.

       <[autotemplate]
           opens the autotemplate environment

       [autotemplate]>
           close the autotemplate environment

       key=value (inside [autotemplate])_
           insert a template command \keyvalue

       key=value pairs are converted to \keyvalue in the output (except special keys) —
       everything after = is just appended to \key.

           <[autotemplate]
           usepackage=[utf8]{inputenc}
           [autotemplate]>

       will be converted to \usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}.

       There is a built-in set of options:

           <[autotemplate]
           documentclass={beamer}
           usepackage={listings}
           usepackage={wasysym}
           usepackage={graphicx}
           date={\today}
           lstdefinestyle={basic}{....}
           titleframe=True
           [autotemplate]>

       titleframe is a special key that tells wiki2beamer to create a title frame. To set the
       title, subtitle and author of the presentation use the keys title, subtitle and author.
       Overriding of the default options works on:

       •   per-key level for: documentclass, titleframe

       •   per-package level for: usepackage

       •   no overriding for: everything else

   Code
       Use code-environments to display animated code listings.

       <[code]
           open a code environment

       <[code][param]
           open a code environment passing parameters to the latex lstlisting environment.

       [code]>
           close the code environment

               <[code][key=value,...]
               ...
               [code]>

       <[code] opens the environment, [code]> closes it, everything after <[code] is passed to
       the LaTeX listings package as options for this listing. Inside the code environment, [ and
       ] must be escaped as \[ and \]. Things between [ and ] are animations. There are two kinds
       of animations:

       •   [<slidespec>some code] - show "some code" only on specified slides

       •   [[<slidespec>some code][<slidespec>some other code]] - show "some code" on the slides
           in the first spec, show "some other code" on the slides in the second spec, fill up
           space on slides without content with spaces

       Slide-specs can be of the form:

       •   n - one single frame n

       •   n-m - sequence of frames n to m

       •   spec,spec,... - combine multiple specs into on (e.g. <1-3,5>)

   Nowiki
       Nowiki-Environments completely escape from wiki2beamer replacements. <[nowiki] opens the
       environment, [nowiki]> closes it.

   Frame
       The LaTeX-frame environment is where the content of a slide goes. You can manually close a
       frame-environment which was opened with ==== Frametitle ==== with [frame]>. Wiki2beamer is
       then aware that the last frame is already closed and doesn’t try to close it again.

   Text Formatting
       '''text'''
           typeset text bold

       ''text''
           typeset text italic

       @text@
           typeset text in typewriter type, to ignore an @, escape it as \@

       !text!
           alert text, to ignore an !, escape it as \!

       _ color _ text _
           make text appear in color

   Columns
       <[columns]
           opens the column environment

       [[[ width ]]]
           creates a column of width, everything below goes into this column

       [columns]>
           closes the column environment

   Graphics
       <<<pathtofile>>>
           include image from pathtofile

       <<<pathtofile,_key=value_>>>
           include image from pathtofile passing key=value parameters to latex

   Footnotes
           create a footnote containing text

   Layout
       --length--
           when found at start of line, with nothing afterwards, insert a \vspace{length}
           (vertical space of length length)

       --*length--
           same as above, but insert a \vspace* (a forced vspace)

       +<_overlay_>{content}
           \uncover the content on the given overlay subframes. They will already take up the
           space, they need to be displayed, so the geometry of the frame doesn’t change when the
           element pops up.

       -<_overlay_>{content}
           \only show the content on the given overlay subframes. They will not take up the space
           they need to be displayed, so the geometry of the frame changes when the element pops
           up.

   Substitutions
       -->
           becomes $\rightarrow$

       ==>
           becomes $\Rightarrow$

       <--
           becomes $\leftarrow$

       <==
           becomes $\Leftarrow$

       :-)
           becomes \smiley (requires package wasysym)

       :-(
           becomes \frownie (requires package wasysym)

   Frame Headers/Footers
       There are two variables, FRAMEHEADER and FRAMEFOOTER. The content of these will be
       inserted at the beginning/end of all following slides.

       @FRAMEHEADER=text
           set frameheader to text

       @FRAMEFOOTER=text
           set framefooter to text

       Leave text empty to reset frame headers and footers.

LICENSE

       Copyright © 2009 Kai Dietrich, Michael Rentzsch and others.

   Documentation License
       Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of
       the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free
       Software Foundation;

   Code License
       wiki2beamer is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of
       the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either
       version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

AUTHOR

       wiki2beamer developers