Provided by: pdf-presenter-console_4.6.0-3build3_amd64 bug

NAME

       pdfpc - PDF presenter console with multi-monitor support

SYNOPSIS

       pdfpc [options] PDF-file

DESCRIPTION

       pdfpc  is  a  GTK-based  presentation viewer which uses Keynote-like multi-monitor output to provide meta
       information to the speaker during the presentation. It is able to show a normal  presentation  window  on
       one  screen  while  showing  a more sophisticated overview on the other one, providing information like a
       picture of the next slide, as well as the time left in the presentation. pdfpc processes  PDF  documents,
       which can be created using nearly all modern presentation software.

       By  default  the  presenter  view  appears in the primary monitor and the presentation view in the second
       monitor (provided you have two monitors).

OPTIONS

       -B, --list-bindings
              List action bindings defined

       -C, --time-of-day
              Display the time of the day

       -d, --duration=N
              Duration in minutes of the presentation used for timer display. If not given or if a value of 0 is
              specified, the clock just measures the time in the presentation.

       -e, --end-time=T
              End time of the presentation. (Format: HH:MM (24h))

       -f, --note-format=FORMAT
              Enforce format of notes (plain or markdown. Default: markdown)

       -g, --disable-auto-grouping
              Disable auto detection of overlay groups. (Default: enabled)

       -h, --help
              Show this help

       -l, --last-minutes=N
              In the old timer mode (see Timer below), defines time in minutes before the end of the  talk  when
              the timer changes its color.  (Default: 5 minutes)

       -L, --list-actions
              List actions supported

       -M, --list-monitors
              List monitors known to the operating system

       -n, --notes=P
              Position  of  second-screen  beamer  notes  on  the  PDF  page (left, right, top, bottom, or none.
              Default: none). Note that this disables slide auto-grouping.

       -N, --no-install
              Allow for testing pdfpc without proper installation. Icons,  configuration  files,  etc.  will  be
              loaded from the source path locations. Mostly intended for developers.

       -p, --rest-port
              Port the REST server binds to. (Default: 8088)

       -P, --page
              Go  to  a  specific  page  directly  after  startup.  In case of overlays, the first slide will be
              displayed.

       -r, --page-transition=TRANSITION
              Set   default   page   transition.   The    TRANSITION    specification    is    of    the    form
              type[:duration[:angle[:alignment[:direction]]]].  See the Page transitions section for the list of
              supported types. duration is in seconds and set to 1 by default. The accepted values for angle are
              0/90/180/270; alignment can be h[orizontal] of v[ertical] and direction i[nward] or o[utward]. The
              last three optional settings are meaningless for some of the transition  types  and  can  be  left
              empty. Examples: "push", "dissolve:1.5", "wipe:1:90", "split:1::vertical:outward".

       -R, --pdfpc-location=LOCATION
              Use custom pdfpc file.

       -s, --switch-screens
              Switch the presentation and the presenter screen.

       -S, --single-screen
              Force to use only one screen

       -t, --start-time=T
              Start time of the presentation to be used as a countdown. (Format: HH:MM (24h))

       -T, --enable-auto-srt-load
              Try  loading video subtitle files automatically. For each video media, pdfpc will append ".srt" to
              the media URI and attempt to load a subtitle file (in the SRT format) from that location.

       -V, --enable-rest-server
              Enable REST server for remote control of pdfpc.

       -W, --wayland-workaround
              Enable Wayland-specific workaround. This might fix HiDPI scaling problems.

       -w, --windowed=MODE
              Run in the given windowed mode (presenter|presentation|both|none). The default mode is "presenter"
              (only the presentation window is fullscreen).

       -X, --external-script=FILENAME
              Specify a script to be executed with the 'X' (Shift+x) key during  the  presentation.  The  script
              must  be  executable  but  can otherwise be written in any language. The script is called with the
              following command line arguments:

              • Name of pdf file
              • Total slide count
              • Current slide number
              • Current user slide number

              If the script exits with a non-zero return value, whatever the script wrote to stdout  is  printed
              in the console. Otherwise nothing is printed.

       -Z, --size
              Size of the presentation window in width:height format (forces windowed mode)

       -1, --presenter-screen=MONITOR
              Monitor to be used for the presenter screen (see the -M option).

       -2, --presentation-screen=MONITOR
              Monitor to be used for the presentation screen (see the -M option).

KEYBINDINGS

       These are the default keybindings for pdfpc:

       Right cursor key / Down cursor key / Page down / Return / Space / 1st mouse button / Mouse wheel down
              Go forward one slide

       Left cursor key / Up cursor key / Page up / Backspace / 3rd mouse button / Mouse wheel up
              Go back one slide

       Shift + Page down
              Go forward one user slide (see Overlays below)

       Shift + Page up
              Go back one user slide (see Overlays below)

       Shift + Right cursor key / 1st mouse button / Mouse wheel down
              Go forward 10 slides

       Shift + Left cursor key / 3rd mouse button / Mouse wheel up
              Go back 10 slides

       Shift + n
              Go forward 1 slide irrespectively of its "hidden" attribute

       Shift + p
              Go backward 1 slide irrespectively of its "hidden" attribute

       Home   Go to the first slide

       End    Go to the last slide

       Shift + Backspace / Shift + Space
              Go back /forward in history.

       Shift + Home / Shift + End
              Go to the previous / next slide, skipping over overlays that have already been viewed, but at most
              one user slide.

       Tab / 2nd mouse button
              Overview mode

       g      Input a slide number to jump to

       m      Bookmark the current slide and store it in the .pdfpc file for later usage

       Shift + m
              Load the bookmarked slide which was saved with m before

       t      Toggle the toolbox

       1 / KP_1
              Switch to the normal mode (pen/eraser and pointer are off)

       2 / KP_2
              Switch the pointer mode on

       3 / KP_3
              Switch the pen drawing mode on

       4 / KP_4
              Switch the eraser drawing mode on

       5 / KP_5
              Switch the spotlight mode on

       Plus / KP_Add / Equal
              Depending  on  the current mode, increase font size of notes or pointer size or the size of pen or
              eraser or spotlight

       Minus / KP_Subtract
              Depending on the current mode, decrease font size of notes or pointer size or the size of  pen  or
              eraser

       c      Clear the drawing on the current page

       d      Toggle visibility of the drawings; if in the drawing mode (pen/eraser), exit it

       f      Freeze the current presentation display (the presenter display is still fully active)

       w      Toggle between the fullscreen and windowed mode of the presenter screen

       Shift + a
              Maximize/unmaximize the current slide view (e.g., to increase accuracy while drawing)

       b      Turn off the presentation view (i.e.  fill it with a black color)

       h      Hide the presentation window (i.e. make other windows on the other screen visible)

       Escape Exit any "special" state (pause, freeze, blank)

       Ctrl + n
              Edit notes for the current slide (press Escape to exit this mode)

       Ctrl + z
              In drawing and eraser mode, undo the last added stroke or erase curve.

       Ctrl + y
              In drawing and eraser mode, redo the last undone stroke or erase curve.

       s      Start timer

       p      Pause/continue timer

       Shift + t
              Cycle between the timer view modes (count up/count down/current time), when applicable

       Ctrl + t
              Reset timer

       Ctrl + o
              Toggle the overlay flag for one particular slide (see Overlays below)

       Ctrl + h
              Toggle the hidden attribute for the current slide (see Hidden slides below)

       Ctrl + e
              Define end slide

       Ctrl + r
              Reload the presentation (e.g., if the PDF file has been updated)

       Ctrl + q
              Exit pdfpc

       ?      Show a cheat sheet with the keyboard and mouse bindings; press Escape or Return to exit it

       Within the overview mode, the following key bindings are used:

       Return / 1st mouse button
              Go to currently selected page (last page of overlay)

       Shift + Return / Shift + 1st mouse button
              Go to currently selected page (first page of overlay)

       Cursor left / Page up
              Select previous slide

       Cursor right / Page down
              Select next slide

       See  pdfpcrc(5)  if you want to customize the key or mouse bindings. Please note though, that only in the
       normal mode the mouse bindings are configurable.

FEATURES

   Caching / Pre-rendering
       To allow fast changes between the presentation slides, the PDF pages are  pre-rendered  to  memory.   The
       progress  bar  on  the  bottom of the presenter screen indicates how many percent of the slides have been
       pre-rendered already.  During the initial rendering phase this will slow down slide changes, as most  CPU
       power is used for the rendering process in the background.  After the cache is fully primed, however, the
       changing of slides should be much faster, as with normal PDF viewers.

       To  avoid  excessive  memory  consumption, cached are only slides that took a significant time to render;
       this threshold is configurable. In order to further  reduce  memory  consumption,  the  pre-rendered  and
       cached  slides  are selectively compressed in memory. The compression factor is typically 10-30, however,
       it takes some CPU time to compress and uncompress, so there is a trade-off. Small images below a  certain
       (configurable) threshold will not be compressed.

       Please refer to the pdfpcrc(5) man page for options to fine tune the caching algorithm.

   Timer
       If  a  duration  is  given (-d option), the timer will show a countdown with the given parameters.  If no
       duration is specified (or if a value of 0 is given to the -d option), the timer will show how  much  time
       has  been  spent.   The  duration  is  stored  automatically,  so  you do not need to repeat it for every
       invocation.

       The timer is started if you are navigating away from the first page for the first time.  This feature  is
       quite  useful as you may want to show the title page of your presentation while people are still entering
       the room and the presentation has not really begun yet.  If you want to start over you can use the  'Ctrl
       + t' key which will make the presenter reset the timer.

       If  a  duration  is  given,  the timer also provides hints aiding the presenter to judge whether the talk
       would end on time.  There are two modes in which pdfpc can  operate.   In  the  old  (and  the  only  one
       available  up  to,  and  including  pdfpc-4.0.8)  mode, at the moment the timer reaches the defined last-
       minutes value it will change color to indicate your talk is nearing its end, thus  mimicking  a  chairman
       frantically  pantomiming  in  front  of  you with five (four, three, ...) fingers up.  A drawback of this
       approach is it is often too late at that moment to alter the presentation pace without  ruining  to  some
       extent  the  rest  of  the  talk.   On  the  other  hand,  the warning indication provides an unnecessary
       distraction if you have been perfectly conveying the talk and the remaining time is adequate.

       Contrary to that, in the new (default) mode, pdfpc tracks your  progress  continuously,  calculating  the
       expected  time  as  (talk_duration)*(current_user_slide_number  -  0.5)/(total_number_of_user_slides) and
       comparing it to the actual wall time since beginning of the talk.  If these two numbers  differ  by  more
       than  60  seconds,  the  timer  changes its color to either orange (indicating you need to speed up) or a
       blueish one (need to slow down).  Once the optimal progress is recovered, the timer becomes white  again.
       In  this  mode,  the  last-minutes  option  (-l) has no effect.  The previous behavior can be restored by
       setting the 'timer-pace-color' option to 'false' in the configuration file, see pdfpcrc(5).

       In any case as soon as the timer reaches the zero mark (00:00:00), it will turn  red  and  count  further
       down showing a negative time, to provide information on how many minutes you are overtime.

   Notes
       Textual  notes  can be displayed for each slide.  pdfpc understands the Markdown syntax, which allows for
       rendering anything from plain text to a very rich  formatting,  if  so  desired.   A  few  types  of  PDF
       annotations are understood by pdfpc and will be automatically imported and displayed. The PDF annotations
       can  be  made  using  many PDF editors and even viewers;  when using LaTeX, the pdfpc package (see below)
       provides a convenient macro.  These "native" PDF notes cannot be edited in pdfpc.

       In addition, while in the presentation mode, pressing 'Ctrl + n' will allow you to take or edit notes for
       the current slide.  These notes are stored in the .pdfpc file. The native PDF annotations take precedence
       over these notes, i.e., if a note exists for a given slide in the .pdfpc file, any PDF annotation on that
       page will silently override it. While editing a note, the normal keybindings are disabled, e.g., you  are
       not able to change slides. To exit the note editing mode, press the Escape key.

       Although mixing the two types of notes is possible, for a given presentation one will likely want to have
       either  only the "native" notes (produced by the same PDF authoring software used for making the slides),
       or only the "pdfpc" ones.  Note that if the PDF presentation changes, the notes stored in the  respective
       .pdfpc file may get out of sync.

       pdfpc  also  supports  old-style  beamer  notes  (see  the -n option), which are typeset on a half of the
       "virtual" slide twice as large as the real one. Note that due to  a  bug  in  beamer,  the  auto-grouping
       feature does not work with such presentations.

   Overview mode
       Pressing  the  Tab key enters the overview mode, where thumbnails of the slides are shown in a grid.  You
       can select a slide to jump to with the mouse or with the arrow keys.  You can also  define  overlays  and
       the end slide (see next sections) in this mode.  Press Escape to exit the mode without making an change.

   Overlays
       Many  slide  preparation  systems  allow  for  overlays,  i.e.  sets of slides that are logically grouped
       together as a single, changing slide.  Examples include enumerations where bullet items are displayed one
       after another, or rough "animations", where parts of a picture change from slide to slide. Pdfpc includes
       facilities for dealing with such overlays.

       In this description, we will differentiate between slides (i.e.  pages in the  PDF  document)  and  "user
       slides",  that  are  the  logical slides.  The standard forward movement command (page down, enter, etc.)
       moves through one slide at a time, as expected.  This means that every step in the overlay is  traversed.
       The  backward movement command works differently depending on whether the current and previous slides are
       part of an overlay:

       • If the current slide is part of an overlay we just jump to the previous slide.  That means that we  are
         in the middle of an overlay and can jump forward and backward through the single steps of it

       • If  the  current  slide  is not part of an overlay (or if it is the first one), but the previous slides
         are, we jump to the previous user slide.  This means that when going back in the  presentation  you  do
         not have to go through every step of the overlay, pdfpc just shows the first slide of each overlay.  As
         one  typically  goes  back  in  a  presentation  only  when  looking for a concrete slide, this is more
         convenient.

       The Shift + Page up/down key combinations work on the "user slide" basis.  You can use them to  skip  the
       rest of an overlay or to jump to the previous user slide, ignoring the state of the current slide.

       When going through an overlay, two additional previews may be activated in the presenter view, just below
       the main view, showing the next and the previous slide in an overlay.

       Pdfpc  tries  to  find these overlays automatically by looking into the page labels in the PDF file.  For
       LaTeX this works correctly at least with the beamer class and also modifying the  page  numbers  manually
       (compiling  with  pdflatex).   If your preferred slide-producing method does not work correctly with this
       detection, you can supply this information using the 'Ctrl + o' key for each slide that  is  part  of  an
       overlay  (except the first one!).  The page numbering is also adapted.  This information is automatically
       stored.

   Hidden slides
       When preparing presentation from an existing set of slides, it  is  sometimes  helpful  to  mark  certain
       slides  to  be  skipped during the talk. The 'Ctrl + h' combination toggles the "hidden" attribute of the
       current slide, making it essentially invisible. It is still possible to navigate to a hidden slide either
       in the Overview mode, using the Goto action ('g'), or by hitting 'Shift + n' or 'Shift + p' to switch  to
       the next/previous slide, respectively, ignoring the "hidden" attribute.

   End slide
       Some  people like to have some additional, backup slides after the last slide in the actual presentation.
       Things like bibliographic references or slides referring to specialized questions are  typical  examples.
       Pdfpc  lets  you  define which is the last slide in the actual presentation via the 'Ctrl + e' key.  This
       just changes the progress display in the presenter screen, as to have  a  better  overview  of  how  many
       slides are left.

   Page transitions
       Pdfpc  supports  almost  all  standard animated PDF page transitions: blinds, box, cover, dissolve, fade,
       glitter (except the diagonal one), push, split, uncover, and wipe, including various alignments,  angles,
       and  directions  (where  applicable).  The transitions are enabled only for sequential (either forward or
       backward) movement; in the later case, the transition is "inverted".

       Advancing slides automatically is also supported.

   Movies
       Pdfpc can play back movies included in the PDF file.  Movies may  be  started  and  stopped  by  clicking
       within  their  area.   For  the  presenter,  a progress bar is drawn along the bottom of the movie.  This
       expands when the mouse hovers over it, allowing one to seek by clicking or dragging within  the  progress
       bar.  Switching slides automatically stops playback, and movies will be reset after leaving and returning
       to a slide.

       Movies  may  be  included  in  PDF files as "screen annotations". In LaTeX, such movies may be added to a
       presentation with the "multimedia" package. Note that the autoplay option is not yet supported.

       pdfpc will also play back movies linked from a hyperlink of type "launch".

       See our website ⟨http://pdfpc.github.io/demo/pdfpc-video-example.zip⟩ for  a  detailed  explanation  with
       examples.

   Pointer mode
       If needed, it is possible to turn on a pointer which draws a red (by default) dot in the place pointed by
       mouse cursor on both presenter and presentation screens. It is also possible to increase and decrease the
       pointer  size.   Additionally,  when the pointer is enabled, it is possible to highlight some area of the
       current slide using the drag mouse motion. The area outside the selected region will be dimmed.  You  can
       zoom  in  the  selected  area  by  pressing  'z'; press 'Escape' to exit the zoom mode. You can highlight
       another region while zoomed in, but there will be no further action on  pressing  'z'.  Drawing  is  also
       disabled in this mode.

   Spotlight mode
       Spotlight  mode  is  similar  to  the  pointer mode: a circular area that moves with the mouse and can be
       adjusted in size, but instead of highlighting the spot by a different color, it shades the background.

   Drawing mode
       It is possible to turn on a mode which allows drawing over slides with the mouse cursor  or  a  connected
       tablet.   When  drawing mode is enabled, drawings can be made on the presenter screen. A separate drawing
       will be kept in memory for each slide (based on user slide numbers,  so  consolidating  overlay  slides).
       Drawings are presently not saved between sessions.

       In  the  drawing  mode, there are two drawing tools, a pen and an eraser. An indicator in the bottom-left
       corner of the presenter screen will indicate which is active. When in the pen mode, the color and size of
       the pen will be indicated by the cursor. The pen size can  be  increased  or  decreased  using  hot  keys
       specified  in  the  key  bindings.  When  the eraser tool is active, the size of the cursor indicates the
       amount to erase.

       The color of the pen can be changed through key bindings or using the toolbox.

       If you are using a tablet, the pen or eraser tool will be selected based on whether the tablet reports  a
       pen  or  eraser input device is being used, overriding the normal selection of the drawing tool. Also for
       pressure-sensitive input devices, the pressure will affect the line width  and  the  eraser  size.   Both
       these features can be disabled in the configuration file, if desired.

   Monitor Plug and Play
       Pdfpc  can  handle  monitor  plug  and play. E.g. if pdfpc was started before the presentation screen was
       attached to the computer, pdfpc can create and show the presentation screen after the second  screen  was
       attached.  This allows the user to rehearse the slides and switch to a normal presentation without having
       the full setup at the computer in advance.

   pdfpc files
       Notes, user-defined overlays, and some additional  information  are  stored  in  a  file  with  extension
       "pdfpc".   When  pdfpc  is  invoked with a PDF file, it automatically checks for and loads the associated
       .pdfpc file, if it exists.  This means that you normally do not have to deal  with  this  kind  of  files
       explicitly.

       Beside  internal  configuration, the following command-line options are saved in the pdfpc file for later
       usage:

       • duration

       • end_time

       • last_minutes

       • notes (position)

       • page_transition

       • start_time

   Appearance
       With GTK3 it is possible to modify the appearance of pdfpc.  There  are  two  locations  where  pdfpc  is
       looking  for  files.  The  default  location  is  /usr/share/pixmaps/pdfpc/pdfpc.css. It can be copied to
       $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/pdfpc/pdfpc.css and modified to the user's liking.

       The geometry of various views (the current/next etc slide) in the presenter window can be adjusted at run
       time in the "Customization" mode, which is activated by pressing Shift+c. In this  mode,  mouse-draggable
       handles will appear. Exit the customization with Escape.

   Desktop integration
       Pdfpc  provides  a  DBus interface that appears on the session bus as io.github.pdfpc. Other applications
       can, in particular, execute any action listed by --list-actions. It is also  possible  to  control  pdfpc
       from  the  command line (and write shell scripts) using the dbus-send(1) utility. For example, to advance
       to the next slide, run

       dbus-send --type=method_call --session --dest=io.github.pdfpc
        /io/github/pdfpc io.github.pdfpc.TriggerAction string:next

       For actions that require an argument, use TriggerActionArg, e.g.,

       dbus-send --type=method_call --session --dest=io.github.pdfpc
        /io/github/pdfpc io.github.pdfpc.TriggerActionArg string:switchMode
        string:pointer

       In addition to TriggerAction*, the pdfpc DBus interface exposes the  GetNotes  method,  three  properties
       (NumberOfOverlays, NumberOfSlides, Url) and two signals (OverlayChange and SlideChange).

   Remote control
       Pdfpc  has a built-in REST server. When enabled (off by default), it allows for controlling presentations
       over network, e.g., using a mobile device as a smart controller. (This section will be extended with more
       details when the REST interface sufficiently stabilizes.)

   LaTeX package
       A tiny LaTeX package is available for pdfpc at CTAN. It provides a convenient way to specify notes and to
       define certain meta properties of the presentation.  For a full documentation, please consult  the  pdfpc
       package documentation. You can open it with:

              $ texdoc pdfpc

BUGS

       Bugs can be reported at our issue tracker ⟨https://github.com/pdfpc/pdfpc/issues⟩.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

       pdfpc was previously developed by David Vilar ⟨https://github.com/davvil/pdfpc⟩, which in turn was a fork
       of Jakob Westhoff's PDF Presenter Console ⟨https://github.com/jakobwesthoff/Pdf-Presenter-Console⟩.

SEE ALSO

       pdfpcrc(5)

       There are several other programs with similar functionality.

       impressive(1) has nice transition effects.

       hpdfp(1) is the Haskell PDF Presenter ⟨http://michaeldadams.org/projects/haskell-pdf-presenter/⟩ program,
       which packs an amazing level of functionality into not many lines of Haskell.

       pympress(1)  is a little PDF reader written in Python ⟨https://github.com/Cimbali/pympress⟩ which handles
       dual screens and beamer notes.

       dspdfviewer(1) is a specialized Dual-Screen PDF Viewer for latex-beamer ⟨https://github.com/dannyedel/
       dspdfviewer⟩ for beamer-produced wide PDF with notes on the right.

       Many PDF viewers have full-screen presentation modes, but without dual-monitor  preview  or  notes  or  a
       timer. These include zathura(1), evince(1), and okular(1).

                                                                                                        PDFPC(1)