A CSS 3D slideshow tool for quickly creating good looking HTML presentations. Doesn't rely on any external libraries but highlight.js is included by default for code highlighting.
Note that this requires a browser with support for CSS 3D transforms and classList
. If CSS 3D support is not detected, the presentation will degrade to less exciting 2D transitions. A polyfill for classList
by @remy is also incuded to make this work in < iOS 5, < Safari 5.1 and IE.
Curious about how it looks in action? Check out the demo page.
- http://lab.hakim.se/reveal-js/ (original)
- http://www.ideapolisagency.com/ by @achrafkassioui
- http://lucienfrelin.com/ by @lucienfrelin
- http://creatorrr.github.com/ThePoet/
- http://moduscreate.com/ by @ModusCreate
- http://idea.diwank.name/ by Diwank Singh
- Webapp Development Stack & Tooling by @paul_irish
- Lock-free algorithms by Samy Al Bahra
- Not Your Average Drag and Drop by @ryanseddon
- Elasticsearch by @spinscale
- JavaScript Tooling by @paul_irish
- The Graphical Web: Fostering Creativity by @vincent_hardy
- Mobile Web Programming is a Bloody Mess by @brianleroux
Send me a link if you used reveal.js for a project or presentation.
Markup heirarchy needs to be <div id="reveal"> <div class="slides"> <section>
where the <section>
represents one slide and can be repeated indefinitely. If you place multiple <section>
's inside of another <section>
they will be shown as vertical slides. For example:
<div id="reveal">
<div class="slides">
<section>Single Horizontal Slide</section>
<section>
<section>Vertical Slide 1</section>
<section>Vertical Slide 2</section>
</section>
</div>
</div>
At the end of your page, after <script src="js/reveal.js"></script>
, you need to initialize reveal by running the following code. Note that all config values are optional.
Reveal.initialize({
// Display controls in the bottom right corner
controls: true,
// Display a presentation progress bar
progress: true,
// If true; each slide will be pushed to the browser history
history: true,
// Flags if mouse wheel navigation should be enabled
mouseWheel: true,
// Apply a 3D roll to links on hover
rollingLinks: true,
// UI style
theme: 'default', // default/neon
// Transition style
transition: 'default' // default/cube/page/concave/linear(2d)
});
The Reveal class provides a minimal JavaScript API for controlling its navigation:
- Reveal.navigateTo( indexh, indexv );
- Reveal.navigateLeft();
- Reveal.navigateRight();
- Reveal.navigateUp();
- Reveal.navigateDown();
If you set data-state="someState"
on a slide <section>
, "someState" will be applied as a class on the document element when that slide is opened. This allows you to apply broad style changes to the page based on the active slide.
Furthermore you can also listen to these changes in state via JavaScript:
document.addEventListener( 'someState', function() {
// TODO: Sprinkle magic
}, false );
- Big changes to DOM structure:
- Previous #main wrapper is now called #reveal
- Slides were moved one level deeper, into #reveal .slides
- Controls and progress bar were moved into #reveal
- CSS is now much more explicit, rooted at #reveal, to prevent conflicts
- Config option for disabling updates to URL, defaults to true
- Anchors with image children no longer rotate in 3D on hover
- Support for mouse wheel navigation (naugtur)
- Delayed updates to URL hash to work around a bug in Chrome
- Included a classList polyfill for IE9
- Support for wireless presenter keys
- States can now be applied as classes on the document element by adding data-state on a slide
- Added an optional presentation progress bar
- Images wrapped in anchors no longer unexpectedly flip in 3D
- Slides that contain other slides are given the 'stack' class
- Added 'transition' option for specifying transition styles
- Added 'theme' option for specifying UI styles
- New transitions: 'box' & 'page'
- New theme: 'neon'
- New and improved style
- Added controls in bottom right which indicate where you can navigate
- Reveal views in iteratively by giving them the .fragment class
- Code sample syntax highlighting thanks to highlight.js
- Initialization options (toggling controls, toggling rolling links, transition theme)
- Added licensing terms
- Fixed broken links on touch devices
- Refactored code and added inline documentation
- Slides now have unique URL's
- A basic API to invoke navigation was added
- First release
- Transitions and a white theme
MIT licensed
Copyright (C) 2011 Hakim El Hattab, http://hakim.se