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Revision as of 11:13, 26 September 2014
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Introduction
Impress.js is a JavaScript library that allows creating "Prezi-style" presentations.
“impress.js is a presentation framework build upon the powerful CSS3 transformations and transitions on modern web browsers. Bartek Szopka is the creator of this amazing framework. According to the creator, the idea came to him while he was playing with CSS transformations. Prezi.com was the source that got him inspired.” (Ratnayake, 2013: 8)
Impress.js relies on CSS Transforms Level 1 and only will work in modern browsers (compatibility table).
Demos
It's probably a good idea to look at a few demos, in order to decide whether you want to read on: Examples and demos
Principle
An impress.js presentation is (like in a Prezi presentation), a collection of "steps" that are positioned on a huge drawing canvas. Impress.js will allow the user to navigate to each "step", using transition animations.
This library is used in the following way:
- You will have to write your "steps" in HTML code
- Each step is wrapped in a
div
using the classstep
. In addition, you can define position, scale and rotation for each step. - Steps can be styled with classes and id's. There are some defaults, and in addition you can use the
slide
class". However, advanced authors would adapt the demo style sheet.
<div class="step slide" .... positioning/scaling/rotation parameters here ....>
.... HTML contents here ...
</div>
Presentation of the library
Files
After downloading and unpacking, you will see a directory structure like this (Aug 25 2013):
bartaz-impress.js-master (directory)
- css (directory)
- impress-demo.css
- js (directory)
- impress.js
- apple-touch-icon.png
- bower.json
- favicon.png
- index.html
- README.md
As you will see, for starters, you only need to consider two important files
- impress.js - the library
- impress-demo.css - a default stylesheet that defines size of slides, fonts and many other things. It is not strictly needed.
- index.html - An HTML demo file that also includes the documentation if you look at the source.
The files impress-demo.css, favicon.png and apple-touch-icon.png are not needed and are not used by the index.html demo/manual file.
We suggest starting to learn impress.js by modifying the index.html file.
Therefore, we suggest creating a copy of index.html
and then opening it in a text editor (preferably one that understands HTML). Also consider renaming the original index.html file.
Structure of an impress.js presentation
The JavaScript code will relies on a precise HTML structure. Your HTML file must include at the least the following:
- A
div id="impress">
wrapper that will include all your steps (also called slides). - Each step is defined by a
div class="step">
wrapper. The div then can include an id as well as positioning, scaling and rotation information. The latter are defined with HTML attributes, for exampledata-x
,data-z
,data-scale
. - You can add your own classes for styling. For example using using
class="step myslide"
would allow you to to define your own CSS style for "myslide". - Somewhere, e.g. after the end of the HTML code, you must load and initialize the library
Below is a minimalist HTML5 file that contains two slides:
<!doctype html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<link href="css/impress-demo.css" rel="stylesheet" />
</head>
<body>
<div id="impress">
<!-- slide 1 -->
<div id="slide1" class="step" data-x="0" data-y="0">
<p>Slide 1</p>
</div>
<!-- slide 2 -->
<div id="slide2" class="step" data-x="0" data-y="-1000">
<p>Slide 2</p>
<p>More to say</p>
</div>
</div>
<!-- initialize the script -->
<script src="js/impress.js"></script>
<script>impress().init();</script>
</body>
</html>
Try it:
Positioning, rotation and scaling with HTML attributes
Basically, these attributes tell where a slide will on the global canvas. Impress.ch then will create movement, scaling and rotation animation to go from one slide to the next one.
Attribute | Description | Values | Default value | Example |
---|---|---|---|---|
data-x | Center of slide on x-axis | pixels | 0 | data-x ="-1000" |
data-y | Center of slide on y-axis | pixels | 0 | data-y="1000" |
data-z | Center of slide on z-axis | pixels | 0 | |
data-rotate-x | Rotation of the slide around x-axis | degrees | 0 | |
data-rotate-y | Rotation of the slide around y-axis | degrees | 0 | |
data-rotate-z (or data-rotate) | Rotation of the slide around z-axis | degrees | 0 | data-rotate="270" |
data-scale | Scaling of slide | Number | 1 | data-scale = "10" |
Here is a screenshot of a simple example. The screen capture was made using from the last step, which has no content but just a big zoom out.
Code fragment:
<div id="impress">
<!-- slide 1 -->
<div id="slide1" class="step slide" data-x="0" data-y="0">
Slide 1
<ul>
<li>Sits in the middle</li>
</ul>
</div>
<!-- slide 2 -->
<div id="slide2" class="step slide" data-x="0" data-y="-1000">
Slide 2
<ul>
<li>Sits up</li>
</ul>
</div>
<!-- slide 3 -->
<div id="slide3" class="step slide" data-x="1500" data-y="0" data-rotate="90" data-rotate-y="180">
Slide 3
<ul>
<li>Sits right and is rotated</li>
</ul>
</div>
<!-- slide 4 -->
<div id="slide4" class="step slide" data-x="0" data-y="2000" data-scale="4">
Slide 4
<ul>
<li>Sits down and is big</li>
</ul>
</div>
<!-- overview, just position and zoom out a lot -->
<div id="overview" class="step" data-x="1800" data-y="1500" data-scale="8">
</div>
Try it: positions.html
The default style sheet
The default style sheet, i.e. css/impress-demo.css does a lot of things. Let's just introduce the easy stuff. Firstly, it resets all HTML elements. In other words, do not expect to see default rendering of HTML tags. For example, an <ul> <li> </li> </ul>
will not produce bullets. This style sheet then defines some classes and id's that are useful to have for styling a "slide".
The demo style sheet sheet can be used as is. However, it is meant for inspiration. In particular it shows how to style differently each slide of the demo file, originally called index.html.
- slide class
- The
slide
class will make the slide look a slide - By default it has rounded corners, light background
- Size 900 x 700 px
- The HTML
q
tag is made big.
- id=title
- The
title
defines the style for the first step that has id=title - In particular it refines h1 to be big.
- id=big
- Styles the slide for big ideas
- The
b
tag has a size of 250px
Below is the HTML fragment of a little demo file that makes use of this demo CSS.
<div id="impress">
<!-- slide 1 -->
<div id="title" class="step slide" data-x="0" data-y="0">
<h1>Slide 1</h1>
<q>impress.js title slide</q>
<p class="footnote">Play with the arrow keys, either up/down or back/forward</p>
</div>
<!-- slide 2 -->
<div id="big" class="step slide" data-x="0" data-y="-1000">
This is <b>nice</b>
<p class="thoughts"> ... for communicating thoughts</p>
</div>
<!-- slide 2 -->
<div id="big" class="step slide" data-x="0" data-y="-1000">
This is <b>nice</b>
<p class="thoughts"> ... for communicating thoughts</p>
</div>
<!-- slide 3 -->
<div id="tiny" class="step slide" data-x="0" data-y="-800">
<p>You may consider changing id's into classes, if you like the original demo slides</p>
<p>The included CSS is just for inspiration. Actually, we make a few minor changes</p>
</div>
</div>
Try it: minimalistic-with-style.html
The demo CSS file also demonstrates that you could do CSS animations within the style sheet and other fancy stuff. Study it yourself, we will go back to basics here...
Transition mechanics
When a user loads the page, impress.js assigns one three classes: `future`, `present` and `past` to each step
. Only one, i.e. the one shown, is present
. At presentation start, all steps are future
. Each visited slide becomes past
. future
and past
steps are rendered opaque in the demo style sheet.
By default, slides are shown after each other. However you also can script the transition using the API. The impress()
function provides access to the API that controls the presentation. It provides four functions you can use, goto()
being the most interesting one.
function | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
impress().init()
|
initializes the presentation | |
impress().next()
|
moves to next step of the presentation, | |
impress().prev()
|
moves to previous step of the presentation, | |
impress().goto() ( idx | id | element, [duration])
|
moves the presentation to the step given by its index number, id or the DOM element. The second duration parameter can be used to overide the default duration of the transition in ms. | impress().goto("menu") |
Alternatively you can get these like this:
var api = impress;
api.next();
....
A simple example
Firstly, it is best to sketch out the presentation on paper.
- Either position slides in different positions
- Or make them big / tiny (then use scaling)
Second, you will have to think about the kinds of steps you would like to use, since you will have to make modifications to the CSS file. This example should provide you with some inspiration.
Requirements
We would like to produce five kinds of slides
slide
: "Slides" styled stepsnormal
: normal steps (no slide look)note
: small notesthoughts
: bold thoughts, using one sentence and big fontspicture
: pictures with a small legend
Each of these will have a CSS class, e.g. you could do something like:
<div id="slide1" class="step slide" data-x="-1000" data-y="-1000">
....
</div>
<div id="slide3" class="step note" data-x="200" data-y="-1100" data-scale="0.2">
<p>One <b>bold</b> idea</p>
</div>
In addition,
- each of these (or almost) should support the same small set of HTML tags: h1, ul, ol, li, p, q, big, b
- Some extra stuff will be coded with extra classes or maybe just inline styling in the HTML files ...
Overview of the impress-min-presi CSS
The following table (needs to be updated/verified) shows what kinds of tags you should use for each step type:
slide | normal | note | thoughts | picture | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
h1 | Very large and up | Very large | no | no | no |
ul,ol,li | yes | yes | no | no | no |
p | yes | yes | no | very large | small (use for captions) |
q | yes | yes | no | very large | rotated, red and 500px down (adjust if needed) |
big | yes | yes | yes | yes | no |
b | yes | yes | yes | yes | no |
Of course, you can use any html you like. What we mean is just that we didn't style those ....
In addition, at the end of your HTML slides code, don't forget to insert the overview:
<div id="overview" class="step" data-x="1800" data-y="1500" data-scale="8">
</div>
</html>
Test of impress-min-presi
- Directory: http://tecfa.unige.ch/guides/impress.js/impress-demo-1/
- test.html
- impress.js
- impress-min-presi.css
Example of a little conference talk
Links
- Official
- Impress.js homepage
- impress.js tutorials and other learning resources (links)
- Examples and demos (links)
- Source code It's the documentation
- Example code using in this page
- Tutorials
- How To Use Impress.Js, Posted on January 4, 2012
- No More Powerpoint I Have Impress.js, Paulund, Updated: March 31st, 2013
- CSS transformation (on which impress.js is based)
- CSS transforms tutorial (this wiki)
- CSS Transforms Level 1, W3C working draft
- CSS transform documentation at mozilla.org.
- Browser compatibility table at mozilla.org
- Books
- Rakhitha Nimesh Ratnayake (2013), Building Impressive Presentations with impress.js, Packt Publishers, ISBN 1849696489
- Alternatives