\documentclass[ compacttoc, twocoltoc, % monotoc, ]{neoschool} \title{The Celestia theme for Beamer} \author{Version: 1.2.2 \quad\textemdash{}\quad Author: Razik Ikhlef\\[\baselineskip] {\normalfont\href{https://apps.edulatex.xyz/celestia/}{https://apps.edulatex.xyz/celestia/}}\\[\baselineskip] {\normalfont\href{mailto:razik.ikhlef@csilyon.fr}{razik.ikhlef@csilyon.fr}}} \date{\today} \begin{document} \maketitle \vspace*{-0.5cm} \tableofcontents \section{Introduction} The Celestia theme is a modern, elegant Beamer theme designed to produce professional and visually appealing presentations. It offers extensive customization while remaining straightforward to use. Celestia ships with 22 color palettes, 9 frame title styles, 11 footer styles, 10 block styles, and 12 preset styles that combine these elements into cohesive looks. \subsection{Basic usage} \begin{code}{latex} \documentclass{beamer} \usetheme{Celestia} \title{My presentation} \author{John Doe} \date{\today} \begin{document} \maketitle \end{document} \end{code} \subsection{Compilation} The Celestia theme is designed to be compiled with \texttt{lualatex} or \texttt{xelatex} for full font management through \texttt{fontspec}. A \texttt{pdflatex} compatibility mode is also available. \section{Language} \subsection{The \texttt{language} option} Sets the presentation language, which is automatically passed to the \texttt{babel} package. In \texttt{french} mode, the names of mathematical environments (theorem, definition, etc.) and code listing captions are automatically translated. \textbf{Default:} \texttt{english} \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[language=french]{Celestia} \end{code} \section{Preset styles} \subsection{The \texttt{style} option} The theme provides preset styles that automatically configure several options (palette, frametitle, footerstyle, block) for a cohesive look. \subsubsection*{Available styles} \begin{itemize} \item \textbf{minimal}: palette sapphire, frametitle plain, footerstyle minimalist, block soft; \item \textbf{signature}: palette petrol, frametitle cosmic, footerstyle cosmic, block fullbar; \item \textbf{studio}: palette oxford, frametitle elegant, footerstyle info, block sober, emphasis accent; \item \textbf{academic}: palette horizon, frametitle elegant, footerstyle classic, block native, titlealign center; \item \textbf{modern}: palette nordic, frametitle subtle, footerstyle info, block sober; \item \textbf{design}: palette imperial, frametitle clean, footerstyle badge, block bar; \item \textbf{executive}: palette palatial, frametitle leftbar, footerstyle fullbar, block fullbar; \item \textbf{sober}: palette terracotta, frametitle gradient, footerstyle info, block sober; \item \textbf{simple}: palette steel, frametitle plain, footerstyle minimalist, block noback; \item \textbf{editorial}: palette manuscript, frametitle line, footerstyle ruled, block sober; \item \textbf{lumiere}: palette lumiere, frametitle plainrule, footerstyle framed, block soft; \item \textbf{chalk}: palette chalk, frametitle subtle, footerstyle boxedruled, block bar, barblockopacity 0.15. \end{itemize} \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[style=academic]{Celestia} \end{code} Individual options can be appended after the style for further customization: \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[style=modern, palette=copper]{Celestia} \end{code} \section{Color palettes} \subsection{Built-in palettes} The theme ships with 22 harmonious palettes. Each palette automatically defines six colors: primary (\texttt{main}), accent, standard block (\texttt{blockcolor}), example (\texttt{examplecolor}), alert (\texttt{alertcolor}), and background (\texttt{background}). \subsubsection{The \texttt{palette} option} \textbf{Default:} \texttt{nordic} \subsubsection*{Available palettes} \begin{itemize} \item \textbf{chalk}: dark text on a warm beige background, chalkboard style; \item \textbf{copper}: gray-blue tones with copper accents; \item \textbf{dusk}: light text on a dark teal background; \item \textbf{horizon}: deep oceanic blues; \item \textbf{imperial}: midnight blue with burgundy accents; \item \textbf{lumiere}: deep blue-gray with pink accents; \item \textbf{manuscript}: indigo and violet tones, manuscript feel; \item \textbf{midnight}: light text on a deep indigo background; \item \textbf{mineral}: dark blue with amber accents; \item \textbf{nordic}: icy Scandinavian blues (default); \item \textbf{obsidian}: light text on a dark background; \item \textbf{oxford}: classic academic blues; \item \textbf{palatial}: midnight blue with gold accents; \item \textbf{petrol}: petrol greens with ochre accents; \item \textbf{prestige}: deep blue-gray with raspberry accents; \item \textbf{royal}: dark, elegant teal tones; \item \textbf{sakura}: soft grays with pink accents; \item \textbf{sapphire}: deep sapphire blues; \item \textbf{steel}: steel blues with muted accents; \item \textbf{terracotta}: warm terracotta tones; \item \textbf{velours}: light text on a deep plum background; \item \textbf{velvet}: dark plum with gold accents. \end{itemize} \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[palette=petrol]{Celestia} \end{code} \textbf{Note:} the \textbf{obsidian}, \textbf{midnight}, \textbf{dusk} and \textbf{velours} palettes use a dark background. They work well for presentations projected in dimly lit rooms. \subsection{Custom palette} \subsubsection{The \texttt{custompalette} option} Defines a fully custom palette by specifying six hex color codes (without the \texttt{\#}) in order: primary, accent, standard block, example block, alert block, background. \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[ custompalette={2C3E50,E74C3C,3498DB,27AE60,E67E22,ECF0F1} ]{Celestia} \end{code} \subsection{Individual colors} For finer control, each color can be overridden individually (hex codes without the \texttt{\#}): \begin{itemize} \item \textbf{maincolor}: primary color for text and headings; \item \textbf{accentcolor}: secondary color for decorative elements; \item \textbf{backgroundcolor}: slide background color; \item \textbf{codebackgroundcolor}: background color for code blocks; \item \textbf{blockcolor}: color for standard blocks (theorem, property, etc.); \item \textbf{examplecolor}: color for example blocks (definition, example, etc.); \item \textbf{alertcolor}: color for alert blocks (remark, activity, etc.). \end{itemize} \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[ maincolor=045549, accentcolor=E63946, backgroundcolor=FAFAFA, blockcolor=1A3B52 ]{Celestia} \end{code} \subsection{The \texttt{unicolor} option} Enables a monochromatic mode in which the accent color is used for all elements (blocks, items, decorations). \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[unicolor]{Celestia} \end{code} \subsection{The \texttt{emphasis} and \texttt{decoration} options} These two options control the colors used for emphasis elements (headings, items) and decorations (rules, ornaments), respectively. \subsubsection{The \texttt{emphasis} option} \textbf{Default:} \texttt{main} \begin{itemize} \item \textbf{main}: headings and items use the primary color. The decoration color is then automatically set to \texttt{accent}; \item \textbf{accent}: headings and items use the accent color. \end{itemize} \subsubsection{The \texttt{decoration} option} \textbf{Default:} follows the value of \texttt{emphasis} Allows the decoration color to be set independently (\texttt{main} or \texttt{accent}). \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[emphasis=accent, decoration=main]{Celestia} \end{code} \section{Fonts} \subsection{Default fonts} \begin{itemize} \item \textbf{Serif font (main):} Literata (fallback: TeX Gyre Pagella); \item \textbf{Sans-serif font:} Inter with light weights (fallback: TeX Gyre Heros); \item \textbf{Monospaced font:} IBM Plex Mono (fallback: TeX Gyre Cursor). \end{itemize} \subsection{Font customization} \begin{itemize} \item \textbf{serifface}: main serif font (\texttt{literata} by default); \item \textbf{seriffaceoptions}: \texttt{fontspec} options for the serif font; \item \textbf{sansface}: sans-serif font (\texttt{inter} by default); \item \textbf{sansfaceoptions}: options for the sans-serif font (empty by default; the theme automatically applies \texttt{Scale=0.88} and a light weight depending on the engine); \item \textbf{monoface}: monospaced font for code (\texttt{plex-mono} by default); \item \textbf{monofaceoptions}: \texttt{fontspec} options for the mono font. \end{itemize} \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[ serifface=EB Garamond, seriffaceoptions={Scale=1.1}, sansface=Montserrat, monoface=Fira Code ]{Celestia} \end{code} To disable serif font loading entirely: \texttt{serifface=none}. \subsubsection*{Engine differences for font lookup} LuaLaTeX and XeLaTeX both use \texttt{fontspec}, but their font discovery mechanisms differ. \textbf{LuaLaTeX} maintains its own font database (\texttt{luaotfload}) and reliably finds fonts by family name (e.g. \texttt{Source Sans 3}). \textbf{XeLaTeX} relies on the system libraries (fontconfig on Linux, Core Text on macOS), which may not recognize the same name. If a custom font is not found, the theme falls back to the TeX Gyre family and emits a warning. To avoid the fallback on XeLaTeX, you can: \begin{itemize} \item use the exact file name instead of the family name: \texttt{sansface=SourceSans3-Regular.otf}; \item check the name registered in fontconfig with \verb|fc-list | grep "Source"|; \item prefer \textbf{LuaLaTeX} for the most reliable font discovery. \end{itemize} \subsection{The \texttt{allserif} option} Uses the serif main font as the default body font and activates Beamer's \texttt{serif} font theme. \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[allserif]{Celestia} \end{code} \subsection{The \texttt{semibold} option} Enables semibold (weight 600) as the bold series for the main and sans-serif fonts. With \texttt{pdflatex}, this uses \verb|\DeclareFontSeriesDefault|. With LuaLaTeX/XeLaTeX, it automatically adds \texttt{BoldFeatures=\{Weight=600\}} to the \texttt{fontspec} options. \textbf{Default:} \texttt{true} \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[semibold=false]{Celestia} \end{code} \subsection{The \texttt{light} option} Uses lighter font weights for the body text (weight 300 for the sans-serif font with LuaLaTeX/XeLaTeX, or the \texttt{light} option for Inter with pdflatex). Also applies a lighter weight to the monospaced font. \textbf{Default:} \texttt{true} \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[light=false]{Celestia} \end{code} \subsection{Math font} \subsubsection{The \texttt{mathface} option} Sets the math font. With LuaLaTeX/XeLaTeX, the built-in presets use \texttt{unicode-math}. With \texttt{pdflatex}, legacy packages are loaded instead. \textbf{Default:} \texttt{iwona} \subsubsection*{Built-in presets} \begin{itemize} \item \textbf{iwona}: Iwona math font (default); \item \textbf{kurier}: Kurier math font; \item \textbf{pagella}: TeX Gyre Pagella Math (\texttt{mathpazo} with pdflatex); \item \textbf{termes}: TeX Gyre Termes Math (\texttt{newtxmath} with pdflatex); \item \textbf{stix}: STIX Two Math (\texttt{stix2} with pdflatex); \item \textbf{libertinus}: Libertinus Math (\texttt{libertinust1math} with pdflatex); \item \textbf{fira}: Fira Math; \item \textbf{noto}: Noto Sans Math; \item \textbf{mtpro2}: MathTime Professional 2 (loaded via the \texttt{mtpro2} package with both engines). \end{itemize} Any other value is passed directly to \verb|\setmathfont| (LuaLaTeX/XeLaTeX) or \verb|\RequirePackage| (pdflatex). \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[mathface=pagella]{Celestia} \end{code} \subsubsection{The \texttt{mathfaceoptions} option} Additional options passed to \verb|\setmathfont| (LuaLaTeX/XeLaTeX only). \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[mathface=pagella, mathfaceoptions={Scale=1.05}]{Celestia} \end{code} \section{Layout} \subsection{Margins} \subsubsection{The \texttt{margin} option} Sets the left and right margin of the slide content area. \textbf{Default:} \texttt{2em} \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[margin=1.5em]{Celestia} \end{code} \subsection{Frame title style} \subsubsection{The \texttt{frametitle} option} Sets the visual style of each slide's frame title. \textbf{Default:} \texttt{subtle} \subsubsection*{Available values} \begin{itemize} \item \textbf{plain}: simple left-aligned title with no decoration; \item \textbf{cosmic}: title with a horizontal decorative rule and diamond ornament; \item \textbf{line}: title with a full-width horizontal rule; \item \textbf{gradient}: subtle horizontal gradient beneath the title; \item \textbf{clean}: colored vertical sidebar to the left of the title; \item \textbf{elegant}: title on a full-width colored background; \item \textbf{subtle}: title with a short underline rule (default); \item \textbf{plainrule}: title with a gradient separator rule; \item \textbf{leftbar}: thick vertical bar spanning the full height of the title. \end{itemize} \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[frametitle=elegant]{Celestia} \end{code} Every style supports a subtitle via \verb|\framesubtitle{...}|. \subsection{Title page} \subsubsection{The \texttt{titlealign} option} Sets the alignment of the title page content. \textbf{Default:} \texttt{left} \textbf{Available values:} \texttt{left}, \texttt{center}, \texttt{right} \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[titlealign=center]{Celestia} \end{code} \subsubsection{The \texttt{titlebackground} option} Specifies a background image (displayed at reduced opacity) for the title page. \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[titlebackground=images/background.jpg]{Celestia} \end{code} \subsubsection{The \texttt{\textbackslash subject} command} Defines a subject line displayed above the main title on the title page and embedded in the PDF metadata. \begin{code}{latex} \subject{Computer Science} \title{Introduction to Graph Theory} \end{code} \section{Heading style} \subsection{Font family} \subsubsection{The \texttt{headstyle} option} Sets the font family used for headings. \textbf{Default:} \texttt{sffamily} \textbf{Available values:} \texttt{sffamily} (sans-serif), \texttt{rmfamily} (serif) \subsection{Font shape} \subsubsection{The \texttt{headshape} option} Sets the font shape for headings. \textbf{Default:} \texttt{normal} \textbf{Available values:} \texttt{normal}, \texttt{sc} (small caps), \texttt{it} (italic) \subsection{Font weight} \subsubsection{The \texttt{headweight} option} Sets the font weight for headings. \textbf{Default:} \texttt{bfseries} \textbf{Available values:} \texttt{bfseries} (bold), \texttt{mdseries} (medium) \subsection{Block title weight} \subsubsection{The \texttt{blocktitleweight} option} Sets the font weight for tcolorbox block titles. \textbf{Default:} \texttt{bfseries} \textbf{Available values:} \texttt{bfseries} (bold), \texttt{mdseries} (medium) \subsection{Heading sizes} The theme allows each heading element to be sized independently. In addition to the standard LaTeX sizes, Celestia defines intermediate sizes for finer control: \begin{itemize} \item \textbf{titlesize}: main title on the title page (\texttt{LargeLARGE} by default); \item \textbf{frametitlesize}: frame title (\texttt{normalsize} by default); \item \textbf{sectiontitlesize}: section title (\texttt{LARGE} by default); \item \textbf{subtitlesize}: subtitle (\texttt{Large} by default); \item \textbf{footertextsize}: footer text (\texttt{tiny} by default). \end{itemize} \subsubsection*{Available sizes} The standard LaTeX sizes are available: \texttt{tiny}, \texttt{scriptsize}, \texttt{footnotesize}, \texttt{small}, \texttt{normalsize}, \texttt{large}, \texttt{Large}, \texttt{LARGE}, \texttt{huge}, \texttt{Huge}. Celestia adds an intermediate size between each consecutive pair: \begin{itemize} \item \texttt{tinyscriptsize} (between tiny and scriptsize); \item \texttt{scriptsizefootnotesize} (between scriptsize and footnotesize); \item \texttt{footnotesizesmall} (between footnotesize and small); \item \texttt{smallnormalsize} (between small and normalsize); \item \texttt{normalsizelarge} (between normalsize and large); \item \texttt{largeLarge} (between large and Large); \item \texttt{LargeLARGE} (between Large and LARGE); \item \texttt{LARGEhuge} (between LARGE and huge); \item \texttt{hugeHuge} (between huge and Huge). \end{itemize} \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[ titlesize=Huge, frametitlesize=Large, sectiontitlesize=huge, footertextsize=scriptsize ]{Celestia} \end{code} \subsection{Full example} \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[ headstyle=rmfamily, headshape=sc, headweight=mdseries, blocktitleweight=bfseries ]{Celestia} \end{code} \section{Footer} \subsection{The \texttt{footerstyle} option} Sets the footer style (hidden on the title slide). \textbf{Default:} \texttt{info} \subsubsection*{Available values} \begin{itemize} \item \textbf{prestige}: three-column layout with short dash separators; \item \textbf{cosmic}: three-column layout with author, title, and slide number separated by diamond ornaments; \item \textbf{info}: author and title on the left, slide number on the right, with an optional progress bar (default); \item \textbf{minimalist}: discreet slide number in the bottom-right corner; \item \textbf{badge}: slide number in a colored badge on the bottom right, author and title on the bottom left; \item \textbf{classic}: bar divided into four alternating colored zones (author / title / date / slide number); \item \textbf{fullbar}: similar to classic but entirely on a colored background with circular separators; \item \textbf{ruled}: three-column layout with horizontal rules between entries; \item \textbf{framed}: three-column layout with a top horizontal rule; \item \textbf{boxed}: three-column layout with rounded boxes around each entry; \item \textbf{boxedruled}: combination of boxed entries and horizontal rules. \end{itemize} \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[footerstyle=info]{Celestia} \end{code} \subsection{The \texttt{progressbar} option} Adds a progress bar at the bottom of each slide. For the \texttt{info} and \texttt{minimalist} styles, the bar is natively integrated into the footer. For other styles, it is overlaid at the bottom of the page. \textbf{Default:} \texttt{false} \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[progressbar]{Celestia} \end{code} \subsection{The \texttt{shownavigation} option} Displays the Beamer navigation symbols (disabled by default). \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[shownavigation]{Celestia} \end{code} \section{Table of contents} \subsection{The \texttt{compacttoc} option} Reduces the vertical spacing between entries in the table of contents. \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[compacttoc]{Celestia} \end{code} \subsection{The \texttt{twocoltoc} option} Automatically distributes sections across two columns. \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[twocoltoc]{Celestia} \end{code} \subsection{The \texttt{\textbackslash twocolumntoc} command} Provides manual control over the two-column distribution by specifying section ranges. \begin{code}{latex} \twocolumntoc[1][5][10] \end{code} This example places sections 1 through 4 in the left column and sections 5 through 10 in the right column. \section{Blocks} \subsection{Block types} Three Beamer block types are available, each associated with a semantic color: \begin{code}{latex} \begin{block}{Block title} Standard block content (blockcolor) \end{block} \begin{exampleblock}{Example} Example block content (examplecolor) \end{exampleblock} \begin{alertblock}{Warning} Alert block content (alertcolor) \end{alertblock} \end{code} \subsection{Block style} \subsubsection{The \texttt{block} option} Sets the visual style of blocks. \textbf{Default:} \texttt{sober} \subsubsection*{tcolorbox styles} \begin{itemize} \item \textbf{fullbar}: colored sidebar with a separate tinted title area; \item \textbf{bar}: colored sidebar with the title integrated into the content area; \item \textbf{sober}: lightly tinted background with no border, colored title (default); \item \textbf{soft}: uniformly tinted background, soft look; \item \textbf{shaded}: stronger tinted background with a colored title banner; \item \textbf{noback}: no background, minimalist; \item \textbf{plain}: blocks with a classic border and background. \end{itemize} \subsubsection*{Native Beamer styles} \begin{itemize} \item \textbf{native}: native Beamer rounded blocks with a colored background; \item \textbf{native-shadow}: native Beamer rounded blocks with a drop shadow; \item \textbf{native-default}: default Beamer blocks (rectangular). \end{itemize} \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[block=sober]{Celestia} \end{code} \subsubsection{Block opacity options} Controls the intensity of the tinted backgrounds for certain block styles (decimal value between 0 and 1): \begin{itemize} \item \textbf{shadedblockopacity}: opacity for the \texttt{shaded} style (\texttt{0.30} by default); \item \textbf{soberblockopacity}: opacity for the \texttt{sober} style (\texttt{0.18} by default); \item \textbf{softblockopacity}: opacity for the \texttt{soft} style (\texttt{0.18} by default); \item \textbf{barblockopacity}: opacity for the \texttt{bar} style (\texttt{0.05} by default). \end{itemize} \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[block=sober, soberblockopacity=0.25]{Celestia} \end{code} \section{Special slides} \subsection{Standout slides} The \texttt{standout} frame option turns a slide into a highlight page with an inverted colored background. This feature requires the \texttt{standout} option to be enabled in the theme options. \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[standout]{Celestia} \begin{frame}[standout] Key takeaway \vspace{1em} \large --- Quote \end{frame} \end{code} \subsection{Section slides} \subsubsection{The \texttt{sectionpage} and \texttt{sectionnumber} options} Controls the automatic display of section divider slides, which present the section title with a decorative ornament. \textbf{Defaults:} \texttt{sectionpage=true}, \texttt{sectionnumber=false} \begin{itemize} \item \textbf{sectionpage}: enables or disables automatic section divider slides; \item \textbf{sectionnumber}: displays the section number inside a decorative circle. \end{itemize} \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[sectionpage=false]{Celestia} \usetheme[sectionnumber]{Celestia} \end{code} To disable section slides manually within the document: \begin{code}{latex} \AtBeginSection{} \end{code} \section{Source code} \subsection{Code handler} \subsubsection{The \texttt{codehandler} option} Sets the syntax highlighting backend. \textbf{Default:} \texttt{listings} \textbf{Available values:} \texttt{listings} (the \texttt{listings} package) or \texttt{minted} (the \texttt{minted} package, requires Pygments) \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[codehandler=minted]{Celestia} \end{code} In \texttt{french} mode, code listing captions are automatically relabeled to \og Programme \fg. \subsection{Code block style} \subsubsection{The \texttt{codestyle} option} Sets the visual style of code blocks. \textbf{Default:} \texttt{bar} \subsubsection*{Available values} \begin{itemize} \item \textbf{bar}: colored sidebar on the left (default); \item \textbf{frame}: full border with a drop shadow; \item \textbf{macos}: macOS-style window chrome with three colored dots; \item \textbf{box}: box with a colored top bar. \end{itemize} \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[codestyle=macos]{Celestia} \end{code} \subsection{Code framing} \subsubsection{The \texttt{codebox} and \texttt{nocodeframe} options} Controls the \texttt{tcolorbox} wrapping around code blocks. \textbf{Default:} \texttt{codebox=true} (wrapping enabled) \begin{itemize} \item \textbf{codebox}: enables the code wrapper (on by default; use \texttt{codebox=false} to disable); \item \textbf{nocodeframe}: keeps the \texttt{tcolorbox} wrapper but removes the visible border. \end{itemize} \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[codebox=false]{Celestia} \end{code} \subsection{Usage with \texttt{listings}} \begin{code}{latex} \begin{lstlisting}[style=python] def fibonacci(n): if n <= 1: return n return fibonacci(n-1) + fibonacci(n-2) \end{lstlisting} \end{code} A \texttt{python} style is provided out of the box with keyword and built-in function highlighting. \section{Text formatting} \subsection{Special commands} \begin{itemize} \item \verb|\texttt{text}|: monospaced font at a reduced size; \item \verb|\alert{text}|: text in the alert color; \item \verb|\mathterm{x}|: formats a mathematical term (bold, block color); \item \verb|\mathdef{x}|: formats a mathematical definition (italic, example color). \end{itemize} \subsection{The \texttt{boldurl} option} Renders URLs in bold within hyperlinks. \begin{code}{latex} \usetheme[boldurl]{Celestia} \end{code} \section{Math environments} The theme defines theorem-like environments with a streamlined syntax built on \texttt{tcolorbox}. Each environment accepts key-value options in brackets: \texttt{title} for a subtitle and \texttt{label} for cross-referencing. \subsection{Block-type environments} \begin{itemize} \item \texttt{theorem}: theorem; \item \texttt{lemma}: lemma; \item \texttt{proposition}: proposition; \item \texttt{corollary}: corollary; \item \texttt{property} / \texttt{properties}: property / properties. \end{itemize} \subsection{Example-type environments} \begin{itemize} \item \texttt{definition} / \texttt{definitions}: definition / definitions; \item \texttt{example} / \texttt{examples}: example / examples. \end{itemize} \subsection{Alert-type environments} \begin{itemize} \item \texttt{remark} / \texttt{remarks}: remark / remarks; \item \texttt{method}: method; \item \texttt{activity} / \texttt{activities}: activity / activities; \item \texttt{application} / \texttt{applications}: application / applications. \end{itemize} \subsection{Syntax} \begin{code}{latex} \begin{theorem}[title=Pythagorean theorem, label=th:pyth] In a right triangle, $a^2 + b^2 = c^2$. \end{theorem} \end{code} This key-value syntax applies to all \texttt{tcolorbox}-based block styles (the default). When using \texttt{block=native}, \texttt{block=native-shadow} or \texttt{block=native-default}, the environments use the standard Beamer syntax instead: \begin{code}{latex} \begin{theorem}{Pythagorean theorem} In a right triangle, $a^2 + b^2 = c^2$. \end{theorem} \end{code} \textbf{Warning:} mixing up the two syntaxes will cause a compilation error. Use \texttt{[title=...]} with tcolorbox blocks and \texttt{\{Title\}} with native blocks. Each environment also has a starred (unnumbered) variant: \begin{code}{latex} \begin{definition*}[title=Prime number] A prime number is a natural number that has exactly two distinct divisors. \end{definition*} \end{code} Additional \texttt{tcolorbox} options can be passed directly: \begin{code}{latex} \begin{remark}[title=Important, colback=red!5] Content with local customization. \end{remark} \end{code} \section{The \texttt{quiz} environment} The \texttt{quiz} environment creates multiple-choice questions with the correct answer revealed on the second overlay. \begin{code}{latex} \begin{quiz} \item Answer A \item Answer B \correct{Answer C (correct answer)} \item Answer D \end{quiz} \end{code} The \verb|\correct{...}| command marks the correct answer, which is highlighted in the alert color on \texttt{<2>}. \section{Bibliography} The theme provides automatic support for \texttt{biblatex} and \texttt{natbib}. Bibliography entry colors are configured to match the active palette. \begin{code}{latex} \usepackage[backend=biber]{biblatex} \addbibresource{references.bib} \begin{frame}{References} \printbibliography \end{frame} \end{code} \section{Options reference} \subsection{Boolean options} \begin{tabular}{lll} \textbf{Option} & \textbf{Default} & \textbf{Description} \\ \hline \texttt{allserif} & \texttt{false} & Use serif font throughout \\ \texttt{semibold} & \texttt{true} & Use semibold (weight 600) as the bold series \\ \texttt{light} & \texttt{true} & Use light font weights for body text \\ \texttt{unicolor} & \texttt{false} & Monochromatic mode \\ \texttt{standout} & \texttt{false} & Enable standout frames \\ \texttt{compacttoc} & \texttt{false} & Compact table of contents \\ \texttt{twocoltoc} & \texttt{false} & Two-column table of contents \\ \texttt{codebox} & \texttt{true} & Wrap code blocks in tcolorbox \\ \texttt{nocodeframe} & \texttt{false} & Keep tcolorbox wrapper, hide border \\ \texttt{shownavigation} & \texttt{false} & Show Beamer navigation symbols \\ \texttt{boldurl} & \texttt{false} & Render URLs in bold \\ \texttt{sectionpage} & \texttt{true} & Automatic section divider slides \\ \texttt{sectionnumber} & \texttt{false} & Section number in a decorative circle \\ \texttt{progressbar} & \texttt{false} & Footer progress bar \\ \end{tabular} \subsection{Key-value options} \begin{tabular}{lll} \textbf{Option} & \textbf{Default} & \textbf{Description} \\ \hline \texttt{language} & \texttt{english} & Document language \\ \texttt{palette} & \texttt{nordic} & Color palette \\ \texttt{style} & --- & Preset style \\ \texttt{block} & \texttt{sober} & Block style \\ \texttt{frametitle} & \texttt{subtle} & Frame title style \\ \texttt{footerstyle} & \texttt{info} & Footer style \\ \texttt{codestyle} & \texttt{bar} & Code block style \\ \texttt{codehandler} & \texttt{listings} & Syntax highlighting backend \\ \texttt{titlealign} & \texttt{left} & Title page alignment \\ \texttt{emphasis} & \texttt{main} & Emphasis color \\ \texttt{decoration} & (follows emphasis) & Decoration color \\ \texttt{margin} & \texttt{2em} & Slide margins \\ \texttt{serifface} & \texttt{literata} & Serif font \\ \texttt{sansface} & \texttt{inter} & Sans-serif font \\ \texttt{monoface} & \texttt{plex-mono} & Monospaced font \\ \texttt{seriffaceoptions} & (empty) & Serif font options \\ \texttt{sansfaceoptions} & (empty) & Sans-serif font options \\ \texttt{monofaceoptions} & (empty) & Monospaced font options \\ \texttt{mathface} & \texttt{iwona} & Math font \\ \texttt{mathfaceoptions} & (empty) & Math font options \\ \texttt{custompalette} & (empty) & Custom palette (6 hex colors) \\ \texttt{titlebackground} & (empty) & Title page background image \\ \texttt{shadedblockopacity} & \texttt{0.30} & Opacity for the shaded style \\ \texttt{soberblockopacity} & \texttt{0.18} & Opacity for the sober style \\ \texttt{softblockopacity} & \texttt{0.18} & Opacity for the soft style \\ \texttt{barblockopacity} & \texttt{0.05} & Opacity for the bar style \\ \texttt{codebackgroundcolor} & (empty) & Code background color \\ \texttt{headstyle} & \texttt{sffamily} & Heading font family \\ \texttt{headshape} & \texttt{normal} & Heading font shape \\ \texttt{headweight} & \texttt{bfseries} & Heading font weight \\ \texttt{blocktitleweight} & \texttt{bfseries} & Block title font weight \\ \texttt{titlesize} & \texttt{LargeLARGE} & Main title size \\ \texttt{frametitlesize} & \texttt{normalsize} & Frame title size \\ \texttt{sectiontitlesize} & \texttt{LARGE} & Section title size \\ \texttt{subtitlesize} & \texttt{Large} & Subtitle size \\ \texttt{footertextsize} & \texttt{tiny} & Footer text size \\ \end{tabular} \section{Available color names} The theme exposes the following color names for use anywhere in the document: \begin{itemize} \item \texttt{main}: primary color; \item \texttt{accent}: accent color; \item \texttt{background}: background color; \item \texttt{emphasis}: emphasis color (depends on the \texttt{emphasis} option); \item \texttt{decoration}: decoration color (depends on the \texttt{decoration} option); \item \texttt{blockcolor}: standard block color; \item \texttt{examplecolor}: example block color; \item \texttt{alertcolor}: alert block color; \item \texttt{codebackground}: code background color. \end{itemize} \begin{code}{latex} \textcolor{accent}{Text in the accent color} \colorlet{myCustom}{blockcolor!50!background} \end{code} \end{document}