Ocideck/docs/USER_GUIDE.md
Brenno de Winter b719c43991 Add presentation timer / rehearsal mode to the presenter
The presenter view now doubles as a rehearsal clock that measures without
coaching: a countdown against a target time, the time spent on the current
slide, and an end-of-run summary (total vs. target and per-slide times, with
copy-to-clipboard). Timing lives in a plain, unit-tested RehearsalController fed
via an idempotent observe() on every build, so it captures every navigation
path. The default target is stored in AppSettings; live adjustment is the K key
(typed as MMSS). All rehearsal state is session-only -- nothing is written to
disk or into the .md file.

- New: models/rehearsal.dart, services/rehearsal_controller.dart,
  widgets/presentation/rehearsal_summary.dart, plus a controller unit test.
- Presenter: countdown + per-slide timer in the clock bar, K to set the target,
  R resets the run, end-of-run summary dialog, and help/cheatsheet entries.
- Settings: presentationTargetSeconds (default target) with a dropdown in the
  General tab, threaded into FullscreenPresenter.present().
- l10n: new Dutch source strings translated in all seven languages.
- Docs: README, CHANGELOG, USER_GUIDE, SHORTCUTS, ARCHITECTURE.

Also bundles a pre-existing in-progress change already in the working tree: wire
the existing ThemeProfile.tableHeaderBackgroundColor into table rendering
(preview, HTML export, file_service) and the settings dialog, plus its
translations.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-06-13 07:03:08 +02:00

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OciDeck — User Guide

OciDeck builds Marp presentations through a structured, slide-by-slide editor. You compose typed slides, preview them live, present them (on one or two screens), and export to Markdown, PDF, PPTX, or a self-contained HTML file. Files stay standard Marp Markdown, so a deck remains usable in other Marp tools.

Creating and opening decks

  • New / Open: use the welcome screen or Ctrl/Cmd + O. Multiple decks open in tabs.
  • Save: Ctrl/Cmd + S. Saving lays out a tidy project folder next to your .md (images/, data/, logos/, themes/) and copies assets in. See FILE_FORMAT.md.
  • Crash recovery: unsaved work is snapshotted automatically and offered back after an unexpected exit.

Slide types

Add a slide and pick a type: title, section divider, bullets, two bullet columns, bullets + image, two images, large image, video, audio, quote, table, source code, chart (bar, line, pie, or spider/radar), and free Markdown. Each card in the chooser shows a miniature wireframe of the layout, and the dialog works entirely with the keyboard (Tab/Enter to choose, Esc to cancel). Each type has a dedicated editor on the left and a live preview on the right.

Text fields support inline Markdown (**bold**, *italic*, `code`, [links](…)). Free-Markdown slides also render fenced code with syntax highlighting and $…$ / $$…$$ LaTeX math.

Source-code slides

Choose a programming language for syntax highlighting (or "plain text") and paste your code. It renders as a "code sheet" whose background, text colour and monospace font come from the active style profile (e.g. Courier). Turn syntax colouring off to show the whole block in a single colour — e.g. bright green on black for a classic CRT-terminal look. The text is sized to fill the panel — larger when there's room, smaller for long fragments. Stored as a fenced code block in the Markdown.

Tables

The first row is the header. Press Enter inside a cell for a new line within that cell. To bring in existing data, paste a table into any cell with Ctrl/Cmd+V (or Shift+Insert): a selection copied from a spreadsheet (Excel, Numbers, LibreOffice Calc, Google Sheets), CSV text (comma- or semicolon-separated), or a markdown table fills the grid from that cell onward, adding rows and columns as needed. Ordinary text — even a sentence with a comma in it — still pastes into just the one cell.

Charts

Pick a type (bar, line, pie, or spider/radar) and a title, then enter data in the grid: the first column is the labels, each further column is a named series. Use Row and Series to add data; the small ✕ removes a row/column. Each series and (for pie/radar) each label can be given its own colour.

  • CSV import — click CSV importeren. You can either keep the data in the slide (inline) or store it as a CSV file. A linked CSV lives in the deck's data/ directory and stays the source of truth (edit it in a spreadsheet); the grid then shows it read-only until you Ontkoppelen (unlink).
  • Min/max (optional, bar/line/radar) — on bar and line charts these draw horizontal reference lines; on a spider/radar chart they fix the scale (centre to outer ring), shown as evenly spaced values in a small legend beside the chart. Leave them empty to scale automatically.
  • Reading values — hovering a legend entry highlights its series (or pie slice). On a line chart the tooltip belongs to the dot under the cursor and shows every overlapping dot at once; on a spider/radar chart hovering a point shows its value in a tooltip too. For screen readers every chart also carries a text alternative with its type, title, and the values per series.
  • Charts render in the preview, presenter, PDF, and PPTX, and as inline SVG in the HTML export.

Image library

Image fields open a library that shows every image found in the deck's directories, with a grid and a coverflow view, search, and a preview pane. Per image you can store a caption (source/credit line, shown on the slide) and a searchable description — in practice your tags. The search box matches file names and descriptions.

  • Filter untagged images — the label toggle next to the search box shows only images that have no description/tags yet, so you can see at a glance which ones still need attention.
  • Clean up duplicates — the button in the footer finds byte-identical images by md5 checksum. Per group one file is kept (preferring the one used in slides, then the oldest), tags and captions of the copies are merged onto it, slides that referenced a copy are repointed to the kept file, and the copies are deleted — after a confirmation that lists exactly what will happen. References are updated in the open decks and in .md presentations found on disk in the search directories, so presentations that are not currently open keep working too.
  • Deleting an image warns when it is still in use — in open decks (per slide) and in presentations on disk that are not currently open (per file, marked "not open").

Per-slide options

Below each editor you can set:

  • Auto-advance after N seconds.
  • TLP of this slide — a Traffic Light Protocol level (see below).
  • Show/hide the logo and footer on this slide.
  • Speaker notes.
  • An optional audio attachment.

Traffic Light Protocol (TLP)

A deck has an overall TLP level (shown as a marking on the slides). Each slide can also carry its own level. When you present or export, slides whose level is stricter than the level chosen for the deck are withheld — so the same deck can be shown safely to audiences with different clearances. Order, least to most restrictive: none < CLEAR < GREEN < AMBER < AMBER+STRICT < RED.

Classifying a deck is optional. As an extra guardrail, an organisation can set a release ceiling — a maximum level that may leave the machine; see Exporting below.

Presenting

Start the fullscreen presenter from the toolbar. See SHORTCUTS.md for the full key list; highlights: arrows to move, G for the grid overview, B/W to blank, P for presenter view, K for the countdown, R to reset the timing, H for the in-app cheatsheet.

Rehearsing and timing

The presenter view (P) is also a rehearsal clock — it measures, it does not nag. The clock bar shows four things:

  • Elapsed — time since the run started (or since the last R).
  • Remaining — a countdown against a target time. It turns red and shows a minus sign once you go over; there is no "speed up" coaching, just the number.
  • This slide — how long you have spent on the current slide. Time accumulates per slide across the whole run, even if you jump back and forth.
  • Clock — the wall-clock time.

Set the target time up front under Settings → General → Presentation, or change it live while presenting with K (type the minutes and seconds as MMSS, Enter to confirm, 0 to switch the countdown off). R resets the run — elapsed time and per-slide timings — while keeping the target.

When you leave the presenter after a run of at least ten seconds, a summary shows the total time against the target and the time spent per slide, with a button to copy the times to the clipboard. This is session-only: nothing is written to disk or into the .md file.

Two screens (beamer + laptop)

When a second display is connected, OciDeck automatically shows the slide on the beamer and the presenter view on your laptop (current slide, next slide, notes, clock). Use an extended (not mirrored) display. Notes:

  • The keyboard stays on the laptop; clicking the beamer also advances.
  • On macOS the "external" screen is the one without the menu bar.

Annotating while presenting

Draw on the slide live with D pen, T highlighter, E eraser, X laser pointer, and C to clear; Esc puts the tool away. Drawings are a separate layer (never written into the Marp Markdown), mirror live to the beamer, and are saved in a <name>.ink.json sidecar so they persist with the deck.

Exporting

Export to:

  • PDF and PPTX (PPTX includes speaker notes) — rendered from the in-app slide renderer.
  • Self-contained HTML — one offline file; code highlighting, math, charts, and mermaid diagrams render in the browser.
  • Portable package (.ocideck) — a single zip with the Markdown and all assets, to hand the whole deck to someone else.

Release ceiling (optional). When a maximum TLP level is configured, exporting a deck classified above it is blocked for every format, and the export dialog explains why. The ceiling is off by default and classifying a deck stays optional — it only stops decks that exceed the configured level.

Accessibility

OciDeck aims for WCAG 2.1 in the editor:

  • Interface text size — Settings → General → Accessibility offers 100200% text scaling for the whole editing environment, on top of what the operating system asks for. Slides keep their fixed 16:9 design size, so what you see is still exactly what you present and export.
  • Keyboard — the panel divider between the slide list and the editor can be focused with Tab and resized with /; the add-slide dialog is fully keyboard-operable.
  • Screen readers — slide thumbnails announce a concise label ("Slide 3/12: title", including the skipped state), charts read out their data as a text alternative, and the fullscreen presenter announces every slide change.

Theming and language

  • Style profiles control deck colours (including the source-code background, text, font and an optional syntax-colouring toggle), fonts, logo, and footer. Every colour can be picked from the presets or entered as a custom hex value. The Colours and Logo tabs show which profile you're editing. The bundled Marp theme is assets/themes/ocideck.css.
  • App appearance (including a dark interface) is configurable in settings.
  • The interface is available in Dutch, English, Italian, German, French, Spanish, Frisian, and Papiamento.