This is an example illustating how to typeset code in LaTeX, especially in beamer presentations. It uses the metropolis theme.
It is a presentation with one slide per "technique" which include some explanatory comments.
Examples shown are minted, lstlisting, verbatim, tcolorbox and knitR. The main document has the ending ".Rtex" which is required if you want it to be able to run knitR. Otherwise, you can just use normal ".tex".
It is accompanied by a blog post with more information here.
In this blog post, some complications which can arise when using code listings in beamer are discussed (package clashes, etc.), so this might be informative if you want to learn more.
This is a presentation I gave about what LaTeX can do some years ago. I've continued to update it (slightly) for other talks. As this is quite a large project with many files and packages, users on the Free plan may not be able to compile it successfully on Overleaf. If that's the case, feel free to grab the PDF here, and download the sources as a .zip for offline perusal/compilation!
This is a presentation template that has been customized by the "Earthquake Engineering and Structural Dynamics" (EESD) team. Link: https://www.epfl.ch/labs/eesd/
Please feel free to edit modify or replace any of the parts.
Original: \(\mathrm{\LaTeX}\): More Than Just Academic Papers and Journals
Copyright Lim Lian Tze 2011-2018
Translation to Hungarian and extension by Erika Griechisch 2018
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-
ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
As this is quite a large project with many files and packages, users on the Free plan may not be able to compile it successfully on Overleaf. If that's the case, feel free to grab the PDF here, and download the sources as a .zip for offline perusal/compilation!
From https://egu2018.eu/PICO_how-to_guide_to_PICO.pdf
Abstracted and templated by Brian Ballsun-Stanton, Macquarie University.
Original template by https://github.com/snowtechblog/pico-latex-presentation by Anselm Köhler
The unofficial University of Udine Beaer Template. This style has been developed following the "Manuale di Stile" (Style Manual) of the University of Udine.