Python ====== -------------- If == * Please don't use () * Never forget the ``:`` at the end of the line Check this code: .. sourcecode:: python x, y = 1, 2 if x > y: print 'x is greater' -------------- For === * ``for`` iterates over a sequence * Never forget the ``:`` at the end of the line Check this code: .. sourcecode:: python numbers = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5,] for number in numbers: print number -------------- While ===== * ``while`` is like ``if``, but executes while the codition is ``True`` * please don't use () * never forget the ``:`` at the end of the line Check this code: .. sourcecode:: python from random import randint args = (1, 10,) x = randint(*args) while x != 6: x = randint(*args) -------------- Thank you! ==========

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% landslide python.rst

landslide

% [sudo] pip install landslide

--theme

--help

% landslide --help

Recently I found landslide , which is a Python tool for creating HTML 5 slide presentations.It’s based in a famous slide presentation . It’s a simple script that generates HTML from a source file, which can be formatted using reStructuredText Textile or Markdown Let’s make a very simple presentation as a proof of concept: we’re going to create a “Python flow control” presentation, showing some basic structures of the language: if, for and while. We need a cover, a slide for each structure (with some topics and code examples) and the last slide for questions and answers. Here is the RST code for it: As you can see it’s very simple. If you’re familiar with RST syntax, you can guess what landslide does: it converts the entire content to HTML and then split it bytag. Each slide will contain two sections: a header and a body. The header contains only anelement and the body contains everything.We can generate the HTML output by calling the landslide command in the terminal:To usecommand, you need to install it. I suggest you do this via pip:landslide supports theming, so you can customize it by creating your own theme. Your theme should contain two CSS files: screen.css (for the HTML version of slides) and print.css (for the PDF version of the slides). You might also customize the HTML (base.html) and JS files (slides.js), but youto customize the CSS files in your theme. You specify the theme using thedirective. You might want to check all options available in the command line utility usingIt’s quite easy to extend landslide changing its theme or adding new macros. Check the official repository at Github . This example, and a markdown version for the same example are available in a repository in my github profile.You can also see the slides live