Ajout de la présentation et correction de la première page du rappport
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5 changed files with 209 additions and 3 deletions
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latex/main.pdf
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\parbox{\textwidth}{
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\sffamily % arial
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\textbf{Oskar ORVIK \\ Aleksander TABAN \\ Brage JOHNSEN}\\
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Elève Ingénieurs \\ de l'INSA Toulouse\\
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Elève Ingénieurs de l'INSA Toulouse\\
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Département GEI \\
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Spécialité AE-SE \\
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Promotion 60 \\
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\fill[fill=couleurcarre]([xshift=-4.7cm, yshift=-4.5cm]current page.north east) rectangle ++(3.5cm, 3.5cm);
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% Ajouter du texte à une position spécifique
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\node at (2.1, -4) {\LARGE \bfseries \MakeUppercase{\sffamily \titre}};
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\node at (6.8, -7) {\large \firstcouverture};
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\node at (3.25, -3.5) {\LARGE \bfseries \MakeUppercase{\sffamily \titre}};
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\node at (6.8, -6.2) {\large \firstcouverture};
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\node at (6.8, -17) {\secondcouverture};
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%\node at (11.5, -12.2) {\includegraphics[height=3cm]{\imagecouverture}};
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%\node at (15.05, -0.3) {\includegraphics[width=3cm]{\imagecouverture}};
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presentation/main.pdf
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presentation/main.tex
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presentation/main.tex
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%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
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% Overleaf (WriteLaTeX) Example: Molecular Chemistry Presentation
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%
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% Source: http://www.overleaf.com
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%
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% In these slides we show how Overleaf can be used with standard
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% chemistry packages to easily create professional presentations.
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%
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% Feel free to distribute this example, but please keep the referral
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% to overleaf.com
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%
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%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
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% How to use Overleaf:
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%
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% You edit the source code here on the left, and the preview on the
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% right shows you the result within a few seconds.
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%
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% Bookmark this page and share the URL with your co-authors. They can
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% edit at the same time!
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%
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% You can upload figures, bibliographies, custom classes and
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% styles using the files menu.
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%
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% If you're new to LaTeX, the wikibook is a great place to start:
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% http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/LaTeX
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%
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%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
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\documentclass[hyperref={colorlinks,citecolor=blue,linkcolor=blue,urlcolor=blue}]{beamer}
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% For more themes, color themes and font themes, see:
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% http://deic.uab.es/~iblanes/beamer_gallery/index_by_theme.html
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%
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\mode<presentation>
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{
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\usetheme{Madrid} % or try default, Darmstadt, Warsaw, ...
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\usecolortheme{default} % or try albatross, beaver, crane, ...
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\usefonttheme{serif} % or try default, structurebold, ...
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\setbeamertemplate{navigation symbols}{}
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\setbeamertemplate{caption}[numbered]
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}
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\usepackage[english]{babel}
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\usepackage[utf8x]{inputenc}
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\usepackage{chemfig}
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\usepackage[version=3]{mhchem}
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% On Overleaf, these lines give you sharper preview images.
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% You might want to `comment them out before you export, though.
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\usepackage{pgfpages}
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\pgfpagesuselayout{resize to}[%
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physical paper width=8in, physical paper height=6in]
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% Here's where the presentation starts, with the info for the title slide
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\title[Molecules in \LaTeX{}]{A short presentation on molecules in \LaTeX{}}
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\author{J. Hammersley}
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\institute{www.overleaf.com}
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\date{\today}
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\begin{document}
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\begin{frame}
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\titlepage
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\end{frame}
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% These three lines create an automatically generated table of contents.
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\begin{frame}{Outline}
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\tableofcontents
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\end{frame}
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\section{Introduction}
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\begin{frame}{Introduction}
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\begin{itemize}
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\item In these slides we show how Overleaf can be used with standard chemistry packages to easily create professional presentations.
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\item If you're new to \LaTeX{}, check out our webinars: \url{www.overleaf.com/events/webinars}
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\item You can also find more quick tips and tricks on the help pages at \url{www.overleaf.com/learn}
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\end{itemize}
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% Example from Chemfig documentation - Fischer indole synthesis:
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% www.tex.ac.uk/ctan/macros/generic/chemfig/chemfig_doc_en.pdf
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\begin{center}\small\setchemfig{atom sep=1.5em}
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\schemestart
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\chemfig{*6(=-*6(-\chembelow{N}{H}-NH_2)=-=-)}
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\+
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\chemfig{(=[:-150]O)(-[:-30]R_2)-[2]-[:150]R_1}
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\arrow(.mid east--.mid west){->[\chemfig{H^+}]}
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\chemfig{*6(-=*5(-\chembelow{N}{H}-(-R_2)=(-R_1)-)-=-=)}
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\schemestop
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\end{center}
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\end{frame}
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\subsection{The chemistry packages}
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\begin{frame}{The chemistry packages}
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We focus on two \LaTeX{} chemistry packages:
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\begin{block}{The \texttt{chemfig} package}
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This package provides the command which draws molecules. Created by Christian Tellechea, a detailed user guide can be found here:\\[0.4cm]
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\small{\url{https://mirror.ox.ac.uk/sites/ctan.org/macros/generic/chemfig/chemfig-en.pdf}}
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\end{block}
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\begin{block}{The \texttt{mhchem} package}
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The \texttt{mhchem} package provides simple commands for typesetting chemical molecular formulae and equations. Created by Martin Hensel, a detailed user guide can be found here:\\[0.4cm]
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\small{\url{https://anorien.csc.warwick.ac.uk/mirrors/CTAN/macros/latex/contrib/mhchem/mhchem.pdf}}
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\end{block}
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% The LaTeX wikibook is also a good source of info, e.g.
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% http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/LaTeX/Chemical_Graphics
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\end{frame}
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\section{Using chemistry packages with \LaTeX{}}
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\subsection{Chemical equations with \texttt{mhchem}}
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\begin{frame}[fragile]
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\frametitle{Chemical equations with \texttt{mhchem}}
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\begin{itemize}
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\item The \texttt{mhchem} package lets you write chemical equations in \LaTeX{} with the minimum of effort.
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\item The example below shows how the standard representation of a reaction (on the left) is created from the simple code on the right:
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\end{itemize}
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\begin{center}
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\ce{CO2 + C -> 2CO} is created with \verb|\ce{CO2 + C -> 2CO}|
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\end{center}
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\begin{itemize}
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\item More complicated reactions are still easy to write:
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\end{itemize}
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\begin{center}
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\ce{SO4^2- + Ba^2+ -> BaSO4 v}\\[0.1cm]
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is created with\\[0.1cm]
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\verb|\ce{SO4^2- + Ba^2+ -> BaSO4 v}|
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\end{center}
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\end{frame}
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\subsection{Getting started with some \texttt{chemfig} coffee}
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\begin{frame}[fragile]
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\frametitle{Getting started with some \texttt{chemfig} coffee}
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It's easy to use the \texttt{chemfig} package for drawing complex molecules:
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\vskip 0.5cm
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\begin{center}\small\setchemfig{atom sep=2.0em}
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\schemestart
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\chemfig{*6((=O)-N(-CH_3)-*5(-N=-N(-CH_3)-=)--(=O)-N(-H_3C)-)}
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\schemestop
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\end{center}
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This is the caffeine molecule, represented clearly and neatly, and built from a single line of text: \small{\verb|\chemfig{*6((=O)-N(-CH_3)-*5(-N=-N(-CH_3)-=)--(=O)-N(-H_3C)-)}|}\\[0.3cm]
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If that looks quite daunting, we can learn from simpler molecules\dots{}how about a single water molecule?
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\end{frame}
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\subsection{Experiments with water and rings}
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\begin{frame}[fragile]
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\frametitle{Experiments with water and rings}
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To see how the \texttt{chemfig} package creates the drawings from your code, let us look at the simple water molecule:
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\vskip 0.3cm
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\begin{center}
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\chemfig{H_2O} is created with \verb|\chemfig{H_2O}|
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\end{center}
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The simple \LaTeX{} code on the right is automatically converted into the molecular formula for water on the left.
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\vskip 0.3cm
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Rings are similarly easy to code - consider the examples below:
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\vskip 0.3cm
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\chemfig[atom style={scale=0.5}]{A*5(-B-C-D-E-)} =
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\verb|\chemfig{A*5(-B-C-D-E-)}|
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\vskip 0.3cm
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\chemfig[atom style={scale=0.5}]{*6(=-=-=-)} = \verb|\chemfig{*6(=-=-=-)}|
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\end{frame}
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\section{Where to go next\dots{}}
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\begin{frame}{Where to go next\dots{}}
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\begin{itemize}
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\item This short example was designed to introduce you to using Overleaf for scientific presentations.
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\item This is made possible by the many great packages that have been developed for \LaTeX{}, including the two we focused on here (plus the \texttt{Beamer} package used for the overall presentation style).
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\item For more help on using \LaTeX{}, see the links on the Overleaf help page: \url{www.overleaf.com/help} or check out our free introductory webinars: \url{www.overleaf.com/events/webinars}.
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\end{itemize}
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\begin{center}
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Follow @overleaf on Twitter for all the latest news and updates.\\[0.3cm]
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Happy \LaTeX ing!
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\end{center}
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\end{frame}
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\end{document}
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