出處:ShareLeTeX應用模板:https://cn.sharelatex.com/project/5810ad8a07a1ab0f0f8c2ce4html
代碼以下:node
1 % Copyright 2004 by Till Tantau <tantau@users.sourceforge.net>. 2 % 3 % In principle, this file can be redistributed and/or modified under 4 % the terms of the GNU Public License, version 2. 5 % 6 % However, this file is supposed to be a template to be modified 7 % for your own needs. For this reason, if you use this file as a 8 % template and not specifically distribute it as part of a another 9 % package/program, I grant the extra permission to freely copy and 10 % modify this file as you see fit and even to delete this copyright 11 % notice. 12 13 \documentclass{beamer} 14 15 % There are many different themes available for Beamer. A comprehensive 16 % list with examples is given here: 17 % http://deic.uab.es/~iblanes/beamer_gallery/index_by_theme.html 18 % You can uncomment the themes below if you would like to use a different 19 % one: 20 %\usetheme{AnnArbor} 21 %\usetheme{Antibes} 22 %\usetheme{Bergen} 23 %\usetheme{Berkeley} 24 %\usetheme{Berlin} 25 %\usetheme{Boadilla} 26 %\usetheme{boxes} 27 %\usetheme{CambridgeUS} 28 %\usetheme{Copenhagen} 29 %\usetheme{Darmstadt} 30 %\usetheme{default} 31 %\usetheme{Frankfurt} 32 %\usetheme{Goettingen} 33 %\usetheme{Hannover} 34 %\usetheme{Ilmenau} 35 %\usetheme{JuanLesPins} 36 %\usetheme{Luebeck} 37 \usetheme{Madrid} 38 %\usetheme{Malmoe} 39 %\usetheme{Marburg} 40 %\usetheme{Montpellier} 41 %\usetheme{PaloAlto} 42 %\usetheme{Pittsburgh} 43 %\usetheme{Rochester} 44 %\usetheme{Singapore} 45 %\usetheme{Szeged} 46 %\usetheme{Warsaw} 47 48 \title{Presentation Title} 49 50 % A subtitle is optional and this may be deleted 51 \subtitle{Optional Subtitle} 52 53 \author{F.~Author\inst{1} \and S.~Another\inst{2}} 54 % - Give the names in the same order as the appear in the paper. 55 % - Use the \inst{?} command only if the authors have different 56 % affiliation. 57 58 \institute[Universities of Somewhere and Elsewhere] % (optional, but mostly needed) 59 { 60 \inst{1}% 61 Department of Computer Science\\ 62 University of Somewhere 63 \and 64 \inst{2}% 65 Department of Theoretical Philosophy\\ 66 University of Elsewhere} 67 % - Use the \inst command only if there are several affiliations. 68 % - Keep it simple, no one is interested in your street address. 69 70 \date{Conference Name, 2013} 71 % - Either use conference name or its abbreviation. 72 % - Not really informative to the audience, more for people (including 73 % yourself) who are reading the slides online 74 75 \subject{Theoretical Computer Science} 76 % This is only inserted into the PDF information catalog. Can be left 77 % out. 78 79 % If you have a file called "university-logo-filename.xxx", where xxx 80 % is a graphic format that can be processed by latex or pdflatex, 81 % resp., then you can add a logo as follows: 82 83 % \pgfdeclareimage[height=0.5cm]{university-logo}{university-logo-filename} 84 % \logo{\pgfuseimage{university-logo}} 85 86 % Delete this, if you do not want the table of contents to pop up at 87 % the beginning of each subsection: 88 \AtBeginSubsection[] 89 { 90 \begin{frame}<beamer>{Outline} 91 \tableofcontents[currentsection,currentsubsection] 92 \end{frame} 93 } 94 95 % Let's get started 96 \begin{document} 97 98 \begin{frame} 99 \titlepage 100 \end{frame} 101 102 \begin{frame}{Outline} 103 \tableofcontents 104 % You might wish to add the option [pausesections] 105 \end{frame} 106 107 % Section and subsections will appear in the presentation overview 108 % and table of contents. 109 \section{First Main Section} 110 111 \subsection{First Subsection} 112 113 \begin{frame}{First Slide Title}{Optional Subtitle} 114 \begin{itemize} 115 \item { 116 My first point. 117 } 118 \item { 119 My second point. 120 } 121 \end{itemize} 122 \end{frame} 123 124 \subsection{Second Subsection} 125 126 % You can reveal the parts of a slide one at a time 127 % with the \pause command: 128 \begin{frame}{Second Slide Title} 129 \begin{itemize} 130 \item { 131 First item. 132 \pause % The slide will pause after showing the first item 133 } 134 \item { 135 Second item. 136 } 137 % You can also specify when the content should appear 138 % by using <n->: 139 \item<3-> { 140 Third item. 141 } 142 \item<4-> { 143 Fourth item. 144 } 145 % or you can use the \uncover command to reveal general 146 % content (not just \items): 147 \item<5-> { 148 Fifth item. \uncover<6->{Extra text in the fifth item.} 149 } 150 \end{itemize} 151 \end{frame} 152 153 \section{Second Main Section} 154 155 \subsection{Another Subsection} 156 157 \begin{frame}{Blocks} 158 \begin{block}{Block Title} 159 You can also highlight sections of your presentation in a block, with it's own title 160 \end{block} 161 \begin{theorem} 162 There are separate environments for theorems, examples, definitions and proofs. 163 \end{theorem} 164 \begin{example} 165 Here is an example of an example block. 166 \end{example} 167 \end{frame} 168 169 % Placing a * after \section means it will not show in the 170 % outline or table of contents. 171 \section*{Summary} 172 173 \begin{frame}{Summary} 174 \begin{itemize} 175 \item 176 The \alert{first main message} of your talk in one or two lines. 177 \item 178 The \alert{second main message} of your talk in one or two lines. 179 \item 180 Perhaps a \alert{third message}, but not more than that. 181 \end{itemize} 182 183 \begin{itemize} 184 \item 185 Outlook 186 \begin{itemize} 187 \item 188 Something you haven't solved. 189 \item 190 Something else you haven't solved. 191 \end{itemize} 192 \end{itemize} 193 \end{frame} 194 195 196 197 % All of the following is optional and typically not needed. 198 \appendix 199 \section<presentation>*{\appendixname} 200 \subsection<presentation>*{For Further Reading} 201 202 \begin{frame}[allowframebreaks] 203 \frametitle<presentation>{For Further Reading} 204 205 \begin{thebibliography}{10} 206 207 \beamertemplatebookbibitems 208 % Start with overview books. 209 210 \bibitem{Author1990} 211 A.~Author. 212 \newblock {\em Handbook of Everything}. 213 \newblock Some Press, 1990. 214 215 216 \beamertemplatearticlebibitems 217 % Followed by interesting articles. Keep the list short. 218 219 \bibitem{Someone2000} 220 S.~Someone. 221 \newblock On this and that. 222 \newblock {\em Journal of This and That}, 2(1):50--100, 223 2000. 224 \end{thebibliography} 225 \end{frame} 226 227 \end{document}
首頁預覽以下:git
模板2:web
1 \documentclass[compress]{beamer} 2 %\documentclass[ignorenonframetext,handout]{beamer} 3 %\setbeamercovered{transparent} 4 %\usepackage[ISO 8859-1]{inputenc} 5 \usepackage{default} 6 7 % para usar figuras devemos acrescentar 8 \usepackage{graphicx} 9 %\usepackage{graphics} 10 %\DeclareGraphicsExtensions{.pdf,.png,.jpg} 11 %\DeclareGraphicsExtensions{.jpg, .eps} 12 %\DeclareGraphicsRule{.jpg}{eps}{.jpg}{`jpeg2ps -h -r 600 #1} 13 \usepackage{tikz} 14 %\usetikzlibrary{arrows,backgrounds,coordinatesystems,3d,shapes,plotmarks,automata,calendar,er, 15 %folding,matrix,mindmap,patterns,petri,plothandlers,topaths,trees} 16 \usetikzlibrary{positioning} 17 %\usepgflibrary{decorations.pathreplacing} 18 \usetikzlibrary{decorations.pathreplacing} 19 \usetikzlibrary{decorations.pathmorphing} 20 \usetikzlibrary[patterns] 21 %\tikzstyle{every text node part} 22 %\usetikzlibrary{arrows,backgrounds,positioning,fit} 23 \usetikzlibrary{calc} 24 % para gerar graficos no latex 25 \usepackage{pgfplots} 26 \pgfplotsset{compat=newest} 27 28 \usepackage{amsfonts} 29 \usepackage{amssymb} 30 \usepackage{amsmath} 31 \usepackage{MnSymbol} 32 33 \usepackage[brazil]{babel} 34 \usepackage[utf8]{inputenc} 35 36 % \usepackage{algpseudocode} 37 % \usepackage{algorithmicx} 38 \usepackage[Algoritmo]{algorithm} 39 \usepackage[noend]{algorithmic} 40 41 \setbeamertemplate{bibliography entry title}{} 42 \setbeamertemplate{bibliography entry location}{} 43 \setbeamertemplate{bibliography entry note}{} 44 45 \newcounter{saveenumi} 46 \newcommand{\seti}{\setcounter{saveenumi}{\value{enumi}}} 47 \newcommand{\conti}{\setcounter{enumi}{\value{saveenumi}}} 48 49 %\usepackage{shadethm} 50 51 %\definecolor{shadethmcolor}{rgb}{.75,.75,.75} 52 53 %\newshadetheorem{theorem}{\scshape Teorema}[chapter] 54 \newtheorem{teorema}[theorem]{\scshape Teorema} 55 \newtheorem{proposicao}[theorem]{\scshape Proposição} 56 \newtheorem{corolario}[theorem]{\scshape Corolário} 57 \newtheorem{lema}[theorem]{\scshape Lema} 58 \newtheorem{definicao}[theorem]{\scshape Definição} 59 \newtheorem{conjectura}[theorem]{\scshape Conjectura} 60 \newtheorem{escolio}[theorem]{\scshape Escólio} 61 \newtheorem{exemplo}[theorem]{\scshape Exemplo} 62 \newtheorem{exemplos}[theorem]{\scshape Exemplos} 63 \newtheorem{propriedade}[theorem]{\scshape Propriedade} 64 65 \renewcommand{\u}{{\bf u}} 66 \renewcommand{\v}{{\bf v}} 67 \renewcommand{\sin}{\operatorname{sen}} 68 \renewcommand{\tan}{\operatorname{tg}} 69 \providecommand{\cas}{\operatorname{cas}} 70 \providecommand{\mdc}{\mathrm{mdc}} 71 \providecommand{\f}{{\bf f}} 72 73 \newcommand{\ie}{\textit{i.e.}} 74 \newcommand{\eg}{\textit{e.g.}} 75 %\newcommand{\qed}{\hfill $\square$} 76 77 \renewcommand\Re{\operatorname{Re}} 78 \renewcommand\Im{\operatorname{Im}} 79 80 \providecommand{\x}{{\bf x}} 81 \providecommand{\y}{{\bf y}} 82 \providecommand{\w}{{\bf w}} 83 \providecommand{\f}{{\bf f}} 84 \providecommand{\q}{{\bf q}} 85 \providecommand{\bfa}{{\bf a}} 86 \providecommand{\bfb}{{\bf b}} 87 \providecommand{\bfc}{{\bf c}} 88 \providecommand{\bfd}{{\bf d}} 89 \providecommand{\bfe}{{\bf e}} 90 \providecommand{\bfs}{{\bf s}} 91 \providecommand{\bfz}{{\bf z}} 92 \providecommand{\zero}{{\bf 0}} 93 \providecommand{\spn}{\mathrm{span}} 94 \providecommand{\posto}{\mathrm{posto}} 95 \providecommand{\nul}{\mathrm{nul}} 96 \providecommand{\proj}{\mathrm{proj}} 97 \providecommand{\tr}{\mathrm{tr}} 98 \providecommand{\sgn}{\mathrm{sgn}} 99 100 \providecommand{\cov}{\mathrm{cov}} 101 102 \providecommand{\dilation}{\mathcal{D}} 103 \providecommand{\erosion}{\mathcal{E}} 104 \providecommand{\open}{\mathcal{O}} 105 \providecommand{\close}{\mathcal{C}} 106 107 \newcommand*{\Bhat}{\skew{3}{\hat}{B}} 108 109 \mode<presentation> 110 { 111 \setbeamertemplate{background canvas}[vertical shading][bottom=white!10,top=blue!10] 112 % \usetheme{Berkeley} 113 % \usetheme{CambridgeUS} 114 % \usetheme{Madrid} 115 \usetheme{Warsaw} 116 \usefonttheme[onlysmall]{structurebold} 117 118 \setbeamertemplate{headline}{} 119 120 % \setbeamercovered{invisible} % default 121 \setbeamercovered{ transparent, again covered={\opaqueness{25}} } % =15% 122 % \setbeamercovered{transparent=50} 123 % \setbeamercovered{dynamic} 124 125 % \setbeamercovered{again covered={\opaqueness<1->{25}}} 126 } 127 128 % copiado do site: 129 % http://latex-beamer-class.10966.n7.nabble.com/Covering-images-transparent-i-e-dimmed-figures-td1504 130 % . html 131 \usepackage{ifthen} 132 133 \makeatletter 134 \newcommand{\includecoveredgraphics}[2][]{ 135 \ifthenelse{\the\beamer@coveringdepth=1}{ 136 \tikz 137 \node[inner sep=0pt,outer sep=0pt,opacity=0.15] 138 {\includegraphics[#1]{#2}}; 139 }{ 140 \tikz 141 \node[inner sep=0pt,outer sep=0pt] 142 {\includegraphics[#1]{#2}};% 143 } 144 } 145 \makeatother % não sei se precisa... 146 147 %\pgfdeclareimage[height=1.4cm]{logo_XIVsm}{semanauniversitaria} 148 149 %% put XIVsm logo in bottom left 150 %\setbeamertemplate{sidebar left}{ 151 %% \vfill% 152 % \rlap{\hskip0.0cm 153 % %\href{http://www.uece.br/semanauniversitaria} 154 % {\pgfuseimage{logo_XIVsm}}} 155 %%\vskip2pt% 156 %%\llap{\usebeamertemplate***{navigation symbols}\hskip0.1cm}% 157 %%\vskip2pt% 158 %} 159 160 % para a disciplina de Processamento de Imagens 161 \title{Processamento de Imagens\\Análise de Texturas} 162 \author{Thelmo de Araujo} 163 \date{Semestre 2013-2} 164 165 166 167 \begin{document} 168 169 170 \frame{\titlepage} 171 172 %%% SUMÁRIO %%% 173 \section{Sumário} 174 %\frame{\tableofcontents} 175 %\section{} 176 177 \begin{frame}{Sumário} 178 \begin{enumerate} 179 \item<+->{abc} 180 \end{enumerate} 181 \end{frame} 182 183 \begin{frame}{\tableofcontents} 184 \end{frame} 185 186 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% 187 \begin{frame}{Análise de Texturas} 188 \begin{center} 189 Esta apresentação baseia-se no Capítulo 8 do livro \cite{Pedrini}\\ 190 \textit{Análise de Imagens Digitais},\\ 191 de Hélio Pedrini e William Robson Schwartz. 192 \end{center} 193 \end{frame} 194 195 %%% 196 \begin{frame}{Medidas baseadas na distribuição dos níveis de cinza} 197 \uncover<+->{As principais medidas da distribuição dos níveis de cinza em imagem com $n$ pixels 198 são:} 199 200 201 \begin{itemize} 202 \vfill \item<+->{Média: 203 \begin{equation*} 204 \mu = \frac{1}{n} \sum_{i = 1}^{n} g_i \, . 205 \end{equation*} 206 } 207 208 \vfill \item<+->{Variância: 209 \begin{equation*} 210 \sigma^2 = \frac{1}{n} \sum_{i = 1}^{n} (g_i - \mu)^2 \, . 211 \end{equation*} 212 } 213 214 \vfill \item<+->{Simetria: 215 \begin{equation*} 216 s = \frac{1}{n \sigma^3} \sum_{i = 1}^{n} (g_i - \mu)^3 \, . 217 \end{equation*} 218 } 219 220 \vfill \item<+->{Curtose: 221 \begin{equation*} 222 k = \left(\frac{1}{n \sigma^4} \sum_{i = 1}^{n} (g_i - \mu)^4 \right) - 3 \, . 223 \end{equation*} 224 } 225 \end{itemize} 226 \end{frame} 227 228 229 \begin{frame}{Matriz de co-ocorrência} 230 \uncover<+->{Matriz de co-ocorrência com $d = 1$ e $\theta = 0^{\circ}$:} 231 232 %%begin novalidate 233 \vfill 234 \uncover<+->{ 235 \begin{center} 236 \begin{tabular}{|c|c|c|c|c|} 237 \hline 238 3 & 2 & 0 & 1 & 0 \\ 239 \hline 240 1 & 2 & 1 & 3 & 0 \\ 241 \hline 242 3 & 1 & 0 & 2 & 3 \\ 243 \hline 244 1 & 2 & 3 & 0 & 3 \\ 245 \hline 246 0 & 0 & 0 & 0 & 1 \\ 247 \hline 248 \end{tabular} 249 } 250 \uncover<+->{ 251 \quad 252 \begin{tabular}{c|c c c c} 253 & 0 & 1 & 2 & 3 \\ 254 \hline 255 0 & 3 & 2 & 1 & 1 \\ 256 257 1 & 2 & 0 & 2 & 1 \\ 258 259 2 & 1 & 1 & 0 & 2 \\ 260 261 3 & 2 & 1 & 1 & 0 \\ 262 \end{tabular} 263 \end{center} 264 } 265 %%end novalidate 266 267 \vfill 268 \uncover<+->{ 269 \begin{center} 270 \begin{tabular}{c|c c c c} 271 & 0 & 1 & 2 & 3 \\ 272 \hline 273 0 & 0.15 & 0.10 & 0.05 & 0.05 \\ 274 275 1 & 0.10 & 0.00 & 0.10 & 0.05 \\ 276 277 2 & 0.05 & 0.05 & 0.00 & 0.10 \\ 278 279 3 & 0.10 & 0.05 & 0.05 & 0.00 \\ 280 \end{tabular} 281 \end{center} 282 } 283 \end{frame} 284 285 286 287 288 \begin{frame}{Matriz de co-ocorrência} 289 \uncover<+->{ 290 \begin{eqnarray*} 291 P(i,j,d,135^{\circ}) &=& \#\{\{(k,l),(m,n)\} \subset S \, | \, (k - m = d, l - n = d) \mbox{ ou}\\ 292 && (k - m = -d, l - n = -d), f(k,l) = i, f(m,n) = j \} \, . 293 \end{eqnarray*} 294 } 295 296 \vfill 297 \uncover<+->{Pode-se normalizar os elementos da matriz de co-ocorrência para que representem 298 probabilidades fazendo:} 299 300 \vfill 301 \uncover<+->{ 302 \begin{equation*} 303 p(i,j) = \frac{P(i,j)}{\sum\limits_{p = 0}^{H_g} \sum\limits_{q = 0}^{H_g} P(p,q)} \, , 304 \end{equation*} 305 } 306 307 \uncover<+->{sendo $H_g$ o nível de cinza máximo na imagem.} 308 \end{frame} 309 310 \begin{frame}{Tipos de Sinais -- Exemplos} 311 \uncover<+->{ 312 Uma imagem pode ser vista como um sinal que é, por sua vez, uma função de duas variáveis espaciais: 313 $x$ e $y$. 314 } 315 316 \uncover<+->{ 317 \begin{figure} 318 \includecoveredgraphics[width=0.9\paperwidth, clip=true, trim=50mm 100mm 10mm 319 0]{./figures/fig_image_signal.jpg} 320 \end{figure} 321 } 322 \end{frame} 323 324 325 326 327 328 %%% BIBLIOGRAFIA %%% 329 \begin{frame}[allowframebreaks] 330 \frametitle{Referências} 331 \bibliographystyle{plain} 332 \bibliography{biblio.bib} 333 \end{frame} 334 335 336 337 \end{document}
模板3:redis
1 \documentclass{beamer} 2 3 \usepackage[british]{babel} 4 \usepackage{graphicx,hyperref,ru,url} 5 6 % The title of the presentation: 7 % - first a short version which is visible at the bottom of each slide; 8 % - second the full title shown on the title slide; 9 \title[RU style for Beamer]{ 10 Radboud University style for Beamer \LaTeX} 11 12 % Optional: a subtitle to be dispalyed on the title slide 13 \subtitle{Show where you're from} 14 15 % The author(s) of the presentation: 16 % - again first a short version to be displayed at the bottom; 17 % - next the full list of authors, which may include contact information; 18 \author[Pim Vullers MSc]{ 19 Pim Vullers MSc \\\medskip 20 {\small \url{p.vullers@cs.ru.nl}} \\ 21 {\small \url{http://www.cs.ru.nl/~pim/}}} 22 23 % The institute: 24 % - to start the name of the university as displayed on the top of each slide 25 % this can be adjusted such that you can also create a Dutch version 26 % - next the institute information as displayed on the title slide 27 \institute[Radboud University Nijmegen]{ 28 Institute for Computing and Information Sciences -- Digital Security \\ 29 Radboud University Nijmegen} 30 31 % Add a date and possibly the name of the event to the slides 32 % - again first a short version to be shown at the bottom of each slide 33 % - second the full date and event name for the title slide 34 \date[slides Example 2010]{ 35 the 1st example presentation 2010 \\ 36 7th October 2010} 37 38 \begin{document} 39 40 \begin{frame} 41 \titlepage 42 \end{frame} 43 44 \begin{frame} 45 \frametitle{Outline} 46 47 \tableofcontents 48 \end{frame} 49 50 % Section titles are shown in at the top of the slides with the current section 51 % highlighted. Note that the number of sections determines the size of the top 52 % bar, and hence the university name and logo. If you do not add any sections 53 % they will not be visible. 54 \section{Introduction} 55 56 \begin{frame} 57 \frametitle{Introduction} 58 59 \begin{itemize} 60 \item This is just a short example 61 \item The comments in the \LaTeX\ file are most important 62 \item This is just the result after running pdflatex 63 \item The style is based on the webpage \url{http://www.ru.nl/} 64 \end{itemize} 65 \end{frame} 66 67 \section{Background information} 68 69 \begin{frame} 70 \frametitle{Background information} 71 72 \begin{block}{Slides with \LaTeX} 73 Beamer offers a lot of functions to create nice slides using \LaTeX. 74 \end{block} 75 76 \begin{block}{The basis} 77 This style uses the following default styles: 78 \begin{itemize} 79 \item split 80 \item whale 81 \item rounded 82 \item orchid 83 \end{itemize} 84 \end{block} 85 \end{frame} 86 87 \section{The important things} 88 89 \begin{frame} 90 \frametitle{The important things} 91 92 \begin{enumerate} 93 \item This just shows the effect of the style 94 \item It is not a Beamer tutorial 95 \item Read the Beamer manual for more help 96 \item Contact me only concerning the style file 97 \end{enumerate} 98 \end{frame} 99 100 \section{Analysis of the work} 101 102 \begin{frame} 103 \frametitle{Analysis of the work} 104 105 This style file gives your slides some nice Radboud branding. 106 When you know how to work with the Beamer package it is easy to use. 107 Just add:\\ ~~~$\backslash$usepackage$\{$ru$\}$ \\ at the top of your file. 108 \end{frame} 109 110 \section{Conclusion} 111 112 \begin{frame} 113 \frametitle{Conclusion} 114 115 \begin{itemize} 116 \item Easy to use 117 \item Good results 118 \end{itemize} 119 \end{frame} 120 121 \end{document}