Opera Show Format Explained

Opera Show Format
Extension:.xhtml, .html
Mime:application/xhtml+xml
text/html
Owner:Opera Software
Genre:Presentation program
Extended From:XHTML 1.0 Strict
Extended To:S5 (file format)
Url:Creating presentations/slideshows with HTML & CSS

The Opera Show Format (OSF) is a set of conventions used in a web page using XHTML 1.0 Strict and CSS 2.1.[1] It is designed to allow presentations to be easily created with web authoring tools. OSF requires that a number of meta tags be present, including version, generator, author, and presdate (the creation or presentation date). The entire presentation, including all slides and images (in data: URIs) is contained in a single file. The look of all slides is controlled by the layout section, contained in a <div class="layout"> HTML element. The slides themselves are contained in a presentation section contained in a <div class="presentation"> element. Each slide is contained in a <div class="slide"> element.

Tools

The Slide Show (S9) Ruby gem creates OSF-compatible presentations using a wiki-style markup language.[2] Other tools include the Windows-based QuickShow,[3] and the Project Velt[4] Opera widget. Opera Software once provided an online OSF generator, which has since gone offline. An older version is available at the personal site of Opera Software's CTO, HÃ¥kon Wium Lie.[5]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: PowerPoint Alternatives . . September 2006 . Jennifer . Farwell.
  2. Web site: Slide Show (S9) . 2020-04-25 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170414010809/http://slideshow.rubyforge.org/ . 2017-04-14 . dead .
  3. http://www.philburns.com/quickshow.html QuickShow
  4. http://widgets.opera.com/widget/6367/ Project Velt
  5. http://people.opera.com/howcome/2004/operashow/ OperaShow Generator