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modules each directory is a course or a browser guide which contains:
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modules the modules list of the Antora documentation component (contains AsciiDoc source files)
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docs the AsciiDoc source files
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images the images
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single-pdf container for generating the course guide or exercise guide
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single-slides container for generating a single HTML for the entire course
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build generated when you convert AsciiDoc which contains these important artifacts
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enrollment the HTML for the enrollment page
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online the online HTML and the PDF for each lesson of the course
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slides the HTML slides for each lesson of the course
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single-pdf the PDF for the course guide or exercise guide
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single-slides the HTML slides for the entire course
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Since we are using the Gradle Wrapper, the only requirement is to have Java installed.
A Java version between 8 and 13 is required to execute Gradle. Java 14 and later versions are not yet supported.
On Windows, open a terminal and type:
$ gradlew.bat
On Linux and macOS, open a terminal and type:
$ ./gradlew
If you run this command for the first time it will download and install Gradle. Make sure that you have an unrestricted access to Internet (ie. not behind a corporate proxy).
In the following examples, we are going to use the command ./gradlew
.
If you are using Windows, don’t forget to replace ./gradlew
by gradlew.bat
.
$ ./gradlew convertOnlineHtml
$ ./gradlew convertOnlinePdf
$ ./gradlew convertSlides
All the generated files will be available at modules/{moduleName}/build.
If you want to convert all the files at once, you can use the convert
task:
$ ./gradlew convert
You can also run a task on a specific module:
$ #./gradlew <nameOfModule>:<task>
For example:
$ ./gradlew 4.0-intro-neo4j:convertSlides $ ./gradlew 4.0-intro-neo4j:convert
If you want to create a single slide deck for a group of slide AsciiDoc files, make a folder named "single-slides". In that folder include the AsciiDoc for the group of files you want to combine. (see example in 4.0-intro-neo4j module) Then use this command to build it:
$ #./gradlew <nameOfModule>:convertSingleSlides
There is similar functionality for consolidating PDFs. It uses the folder "single-pdf". The caution with generating a large PDF, however is memory. If you have a large PDF that you want to produce, you may need to install mogrify.
$ #./gradlew <nameOfModule>:convertSinglePdf
Gradle will do his best to detect if a task needs to be run again or not.
If you want to force Gradle to execute a task again, you can remove the build
directory using the clean
task:
$ ./gradlew clean
Once the build
directory is removed, type the task you want to execute.
You can also clean a particular module which removes the build folder for that module:
$ #./gradlew <nameOfModule>:clean
To enable LiveReload, you will need to install the LiveReload browser extension on Chrome. Once it’s done you should have a new icon on the right of your address bar:
Next, you need to open two terminal. In the first one, type the following command to continuously convert the AsciiDoc source to a reveal.js presentation:
$ #./gradlew --continuous <nameOfModule>:convertSlides
On the second one, type the following command to start the LiveReload server on the demo module:
$ #./gradlew <nameOfModule>:liveReload
> Task :liveReload
Enabling LiveReload at port 35729 for /path/to/modules/demo/build
You’re all set!
Now, open Chrome and navigate to the HTML file of your choice, for instance: http://localhost:35729/slides/04_IntroductionToCypherPresentation.html. Don’t forget to enable the LiveReload extension on your browser by clicking on the icon:
Notice that the middle circle is now filled in black.
If you edit the corresponding AsciiDoc source (or resources), and wait a few seconds, your browser will automatically be refreshed with your changes.
To add a new module, edit the settings.gradle file at the root of this project. For instance, if we want to add a new module named `browser" located at modules/browser-guides, we need to add the following lines:
include 'browser'
project(':browser').projectDir = file('modules/browser-guides')
Now we can execute tasks on this new module, for instance:
$ ./gradlew browser:convert
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In a terminal window, navigate to the folder where the slides HTML resides, for example:
cd modules/demo/build/slides
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Open the an HTML page in JS-enabled Browser
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ESC
to see summary slides -
Page down/Page up to move from slide to slide
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Option + Click to zoom in/zoom out
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S to open speaker notes in a different window
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As a prerequisite, you will need to install the latest LTS of Node.js.
Once node
and npm
are installed, open a terminal and type:
$ npm i $ npm i --prefix resources/site-generator
The above commands will install the dependencies.
Build and publish the site in public directory:
$ npm run build
Start a local server to serve the public directory:
$ npm run start
Continuously watch, build and serve the site:
$ npm run watch
💡
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It can take quite some time to build all the courses everytime.
To get a snappier experience, we recommend using the envrionment variable $ TRAINING_MODULE=datascience npm run watch |