frontend-slides
Frontend Slides generates zero-dependency, animation-rich HTML presentations that run entirely in browsers, suitable for creating new decks, converting PowerPoint files to web format, or enhancing existing slides. Use it when building talk decks, pitch presentations, or workshop materials, especially when exploring design aesthetics through visual previews rather than abstract style choices. The tool prioritizes viewport-fitted slides with no internal scrolling, distinctive design avoiding generic templates, and production-quality code in single self-contained HTML files.
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/affaan-m/ECC /tmp/frontend-slides && cp -r /tmp/frontend-slides/.cursor/skills/frontend-slides ~/.claude/skills/frontend-slidesSKILL.md
# Frontend Slides Create zero-dependency, animation-rich HTML presentations that run entirely in the browser. Inspired by the visual exploration approach showcased in work by [zarazhangrui](https://github.com/zarazhangrui). ## When to Activate - Creating a talk deck, pitch deck, workshop deck, or internal presentation - Converting `.ppt` or `.pptx` slides into an HTML presentation - Improving an existing HTML presentation's layout, motion, or typography - Exploring presentation styles with a user who does not know their design preference yet ## Non-Negotiables 1. **Zero dependencies**: default to one self-contained HTML file with inline CSS and JS. 2. **Viewport fit is mandatory**: every slide must fit inside one viewport with no internal scrolling. 3. **Show, don't tell**: use visual previews instead of abstract style questionnaires. 4. **Distinctive design**: avoid generic purple-gradient, Inter-on-white, template-looking decks. 5. **Production quality**: keep code commented, accessible, responsive, and performant. Before generating, read `STYLE_PRESETS.md` for the viewport-safe CSS base, density limits, preset catalog, and CSS gotchas. ## Workflow ### 1. Detect Mode Choose one path: - **New presentation**: user has a topic, notes, or full draft - **PPT conversion**: user has `.ppt` or `.pptx` - **Enhancement**: user already has HTML slides and wants improvements ### 2. Discover Content Ask only the minimum needed: - purpose: pitch, teaching, conference talk, internal update - length: short (5-10), medium (10-20), long (20+) - content state: finished copy, rough notes, topic only If the user has content, ask them to paste it before styling. ### 3. Discover Style Default to visual exploration. If the user already knows the desired preset, skip previews and use it directly. Otherwise: 1. Ask what feeling the deck should create: impressed, energized, focused, inspired. 2. Generate **3 single-slide preview files** in `.ecc-design/slide-previews/`. 3. Each preview must be self-contained, show typography/color/motion clearly, and stay under roughly 100 lines of slide content. 4. Ask the user which preview to keep or what elements to mix. Use the preset guide in `STYLE_PRESETS.md` when mapping mood to style. ### 4. Build the Presentation Output either: - `presentation.html` - `[presentation-name].html` Use an `assets/` folder only when the deck contains extracted or user-supplied images. Required structure: - semantic slide sections - a viewport-safe CSS base from `STYLE_PRESETS.md` - CSS custom properties for theme values - a presentation controller class for keyboard, wheel, and touch navigation - Intersection Observer for reveal animations - reduced-motion support ### 5. Enforce Viewport Fit Treat this as a hard gate. Rules: - every `.slide` must use `height: 100vh; height: 100dvh; overflow: hidden;` - all type and spacing must scale with `clamp()` - when content does not fit, split into multiple slides - never solve overflow by shrinking text below readable sizes - never allow scrollbars inside a slide Use the density limits and mandatory CSS block in `STYLE_PRESETS.md`. ### 6. Validate Check the finished deck at these sizes: - 1920x1080 - 1280x720 - 768x1024 - 375x667 - 667x375 If browser automation is available, use it to verify no slide overflows and that keyboard navigation works. ### 7. Deliver At handoff: - delete temporary preview files unless the user wants to keep them - open the deck with the platform-appropriate opener when useful - summarize file path, preset used, slide count, and easy theme customization points Use the correct opener for the current OS: - macOS: `open file.html` - Linux: `xdg-open file.html` - Windows: `start "" file.html` ## PPT / PPTX Conversion For PowerPoint conversion: 1. Prefer `python3` with `python-pptx` to extract text, images, and notes. 2. If `python-pptx` is unavailable, ask whether to install it or fall back to a manual/export-based workflow. 3. Preserve slide order, speaker notes, and extracted assets. 4. After extraction, run the same style-selection workflow as a new presentation. Keep conversion cross-platform. Do not rely on macOS-only tools when Python can do the job. ## Implementation Requirements ### HTML / CSS - Use inline CSS and JS unless the user explicitly wants a multi-file project. - Fonts may come from Google Fonts or Fontshare. - Prefer atmospheric backgrounds, strong type hierarchy, and a clear visual direction. - Use abstract shapes, gradients, grids, noise, and geometry rather than illustrations. ### JavaScript Include: - keyboard navigation - touch / swipe navigation - mouse wheel navigation - progress indicator or slide index - reveal-on-enter animation triggers ### Accessibility - use semantic structure (`main`, `section`, `nav`) - keep contrast readable - support keyboard-only navigation - respect `prefers-reduced-motion` ## Content Density Limits Use these maxima unless the user explicitly asks for denser slides and readability still holds: | Slide type | Limit | |------------|-------| | Title | 1 heading + 1 subtitle + optional tagline | | Content | 1 heading + 4-6 bullets or 2 short paragraphs | | Feature grid | 6 cards max | | Code | 8-10 lines max | | Quote | 1 quote + attribution | | Image | 1 image constrained by viewport | ## Anti-Patterns - generic startup gradients with no visual identity - system-font decks unless intentionally editorial - long bullet walls - code blocks that need scrolling - fixed-height content boxes that break on short screens - invalid negated CSS functions like `-clamp(...)` ## Related ECC Skills - `frontend-patterns` for component and interaction patterns around the deck - `liquid-glass-design` when a presentation intentionally borrows Apple glass aesthetics - `e2e-testing` if you need automated browser verification for the final deck ## Deliverable Checklist - presentation runs from a local file in a browser - every slide fits the viewp
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