\documentclass{beamer} \usepackage[T1]{fontenc} \usepackage[utf8]{inputenc} \usepackage[ngerman]{babel} %\usepackage{paralist} %\useoutertheme{infolines} \usepackage{graphicx} \usepackage{hyperref} \usepackage{listings} \usepackage{color} \usetheme{Warsaw} \usecolortheme{crane} \pagenumbering{arabic} \def\thesection{\arabic{section})} \def\thesubsection{\alph{subsection})} \def\thesubsubsection{(\roman{subsubsection})} \setbeamertemplate{navigation symbols}{} \graphicspath{ {src/} {/home/jim/Pictures/} } \definecolor{mygreen}{rgb}{0,0.6,0} \definecolor{mygray}{rgb}{0.5,0.5,0.5} \definecolor{mymauve}{rgb}{0.58,0,0.82} %\definecolor{craneorange}{RGB}{61,61,61} %\definecolor{craneblue}{RGB}{255,255,255} \lstset{ % backgroundcolor=\color{white}, % choose the background color; you must add \usepackage{color} or \usepackage{xcolor} basicstyle=\footnotesize, % the size of the fonts that are used for the code breakatwhitespace=false, % sets if automatic breaks should only happen at whitespace breaklines=true, % sets automatic line breaking captionpos=b, % sets the caption-position to bottom commentstyle=\color{mygray}, % comment style deletekeywords={}, % if you want to delete keywords from the given language escapeinside={\%*}{*)}, % if you want to add LaTeX within your code extendedchars=true, % lets you use non-ASCII characters; for 8-bits encodings only, does not work with UTF-8 keepspaces=true, % keeps spaces in text, useful for keeping indentation of code (possibly needs columns=flexible) keywordstyle=\color{blue}, % keyword style language=PHP, % the language of the code morekeywords={class, function, return, protected, public, private, const, static, new, extends, namespace, null}, % if you want to add more keywords to the set numbers=left, % where to put the line-numbers; possible values are (none, left, right) numbersep=5pt, % how far the line-numbers are from the code numberstyle=\tiny\color{mygray}, % the style that is used for the line-numbers rulecolor=\color{black}, % if not set, the frame-color may be changed on line-breaks within not-black text (e.g. comments (green here)) showspaces=false, % show spaces everywhere adding particular underscores; it overrides 'showstringspaces' showstringspaces=false, % underline spaces within strings only showtabs=false, % show tabs within strings adding particular underscores stepnumber=2, % the step between two line-numbers. If it's 1, each line will be numbered stringstyle=\color{mygreen}, % string literal style tabsize=2, % sets default tabsize to 2 spaces title=\lstname % show the filename of files included with \lstinputlisting; also try caption instead of title } \hypersetup{ pdfauthor=Jim Martens, pdfstartview=Fit } \expandafter\def\expandafter\insertshorttitle\expandafter{% \raggedleft \insertframenumber\,/\,\inserttotalframenumber\;} \begin{document} \author{Jim 2martens} \title{Was sind Programmiersprachen?} \date{\today} \begin{frame} \titlepage \end{frame} \begin{frame}{Sprachen} Kontextfreie Sprachen: \begin{itemize} \item<2-> Auszeichnungssprachen (z.B. XML, HTML) \item<3-> Programmiersprachen, Skriptsprachen, Templatesprachen \item<4-> ... \end{itemize} \end{frame} \begin{frame}{Definitionen} \begin{description} \item[Skriptsprachen] sind Programmiersprachen, die vor allem für kleine, überschaubare Programme gedacht sind. \item[Programmiersprachen] sind [...] formale Sprachen zur Formulierung von Datenstrukturen und Algorithmen, d. h. von Rechenvorschriften, die von einem Computer ausgeführt werden können. Sie setzen sich aus Anweisungen nach einem vorgegebenen Muster zusammen, der sogenannten Syntax. \item[Templatesprachen] sind begrenzte Programmiersprachen, die meistens kompiliert und zur Strukturierung von Templates verwendet werden. \end{description} Quelle: Wikipedia \end{frame} \begin{frame}{Technologie} \begin{itemize} \item interpretierte Sprachen (z.B. Python, PHP, JavaScript, Bash/Shell) \item kompilierte Sprachen (z.B. C, C++, Go, Twig, Smarty) \item Hybride Sprachen (z.B. Java, C\#) \end{itemize} \end{frame} \begin{frame}{Sprachen} \begin{itemize} \item Skriptsprachen (z.B. Bash/Shell) \item Programmiersprachen (z.B. C, C++, Python, JavaScript, Go, PHP) \item Templatesprachen (z.B. Twig, Smarty) \end{itemize} \end{frame} \begin{frame}{Zusammenfassung} \begin{itemize} \item Programmiersprachen umfassen Skript- und Templatesprachen \item unterscheiden sich in Ausführungsweise \item interpretierte Sprachen sind auch Programmiersprachen!!! \end{itemize} \end{frame} \end{document}