Beamer theorem inside itemize












0















I would like to use begin{theorem} end{theorem} in an itemized list in beamer. Unfortunately, this messes up the indentation of the itemization, and pushes the item sign to the far left of the page - it seems that Theorem has a fixed position, and the item sign gets on the left of it. In other words, the theorem environment seems to define the layout instead of the itemization. Is there any way to change it?



I would also like to change the colour of how Theorem appears.










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  • 1





    Welcome to tex.se! To help the helpful people here help you, it would be useful if you could add a short, complete document showing the problem (a so-called Minimal Working Example, or MWE) to your question.

    – Harald Hanche-Olsen
    Jan 6 at 14:52
















0















I would like to use begin{theorem} end{theorem} in an itemized list in beamer. Unfortunately, this messes up the indentation of the itemization, and pushes the item sign to the far left of the page - it seems that Theorem has a fixed position, and the item sign gets on the left of it. In other words, the theorem environment seems to define the layout instead of the itemization. Is there any way to change it?



I would also like to change the colour of how Theorem appears.










share|improve this question


















  • 1





    Welcome to tex.se! To help the helpful people here help you, it would be useful if you could add a short, complete document showing the problem (a so-called Minimal Working Example, or MWE) to your question.

    – Harald Hanche-Olsen
    Jan 6 at 14:52














0












0








0








I would like to use begin{theorem} end{theorem} in an itemized list in beamer. Unfortunately, this messes up the indentation of the itemization, and pushes the item sign to the far left of the page - it seems that Theorem has a fixed position, and the item sign gets on the left of it. In other words, the theorem environment seems to define the layout instead of the itemization. Is there any way to change it?



I would also like to change the colour of how Theorem appears.










share|improve this question














I would like to use begin{theorem} end{theorem} in an itemized list in beamer. Unfortunately, this messes up the indentation of the itemization, and pushes the item sign to the far left of the page - it seems that Theorem has a fixed position, and the item sign gets on the left of it. In other words, the theorem environment seems to define the layout instead of the itemization. Is there any way to change it?



I would also like to change the colour of how Theorem appears.







beamer






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asked Jan 6 at 14:41









user60121user60121

1




1








  • 1





    Welcome to tex.se! To help the helpful people here help you, it would be useful if you could add a short, complete document showing the problem (a so-called Minimal Working Example, or MWE) to your question.

    – Harald Hanche-Olsen
    Jan 6 at 14:52














  • 1





    Welcome to tex.se! To help the helpful people here help you, it would be useful if you could add a short, complete document showing the problem (a so-called Minimal Working Example, or MWE) to your question.

    – Harald Hanche-Olsen
    Jan 6 at 14:52








1




1





Welcome to tex.se! To help the helpful people here help you, it would be useful if you could add a short, complete document showing the problem (a so-called Minimal Working Example, or MWE) to your question.

– Harald Hanche-Olsen
Jan 6 at 14:52





Welcome to tex.se! To help the helpful people here help you, it would be useful if you could add a short, complete document showing the problem (a so-called Minimal Working Example, or MWE) to your question.

– Harald Hanche-Olsen
Jan 6 at 14:52










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















1














As a workaround you can wrap the theorem in a minipage of whatever width you'd like:



documentclass{beamer}

usetheme{Berlin}

begin{document}

begin{frame}
begin{itemize}
item test
item
begin{minipage}[t]{linewidth}
vspace*{-1.2baselineskip}
begin{theorem}
test
end{theorem}
end{minipage}
item test
end{itemize}
end{frame}

end{document}


enter image description here






share|improve this answer
























  • Simple but efficient! :-) Thanks.

    – user60121
    Jan 6 at 17:58











  • @user60121 You're welcome!

    – samcarter
    Jan 6 at 19:03











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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









1














As a workaround you can wrap the theorem in a minipage of whatever width you'd like:



documentclass{beamer}

usetheme{Berlin}

begin{document}

begin{frame}
begin{itemize}
item test
item
begin{minipage}[t]{linewidth}
vspace*{-1.2baselineskip}
begin{theorem}
test
end{theorem}
end{minipage}
item test
end{itemize}
end{frame}

end{document}


enter image description here






share|improve this answer
























  • Simple but efficient! :-) Thanks.

    – user60121
    Jan 6 at 17:58











  • @user60121 You're welcome!

    – samcarter
    Jan 6 at 19:03
















1














As a workaround you can wrap the theorem in a minipage of whatever width you'd like:



documentclass{beamer}

usetheme{Berlin}

begin{document}

begin{frame}
begin{itemize}
item test
item
begin{minipage}[t]{linewidth}
vspace*{-1.2baselineskip}
begin{theorem}
test
end{theorem}
end{minipage}
item test
end{itemize}
end{frame}

end{document}


enter image description here






share|improve this answer
























  • Simple but efficient! :-) Thanks.

    – user60121
    Jan 6 at 17:58











  • @user60121 You're welcome!

    – samcarter
    Jan 6 at 19:03














1












1








1







As a workaround you can wrap the theorem in a minipage of whatever width you'd like:



documentclass{beamer}

usetheme{Berlin}

begin{document}

begin{frame}
begin{itemize}
item test
item
begin{minipage}[t]{linewidth}
vspace*{-1.2baselineskip}
begin{theorem}
test
end{theorem}
end{minipage}
item test
end{itemize}
end{frame}

end{document}


enter image description here






share|improve this answer













As a workaround you can wrap the theorem in a minipage of whatever width you'd like:



documentclass{beamer}

usetheme{Berlin}

begin{document}

begin{frame}
begin{itemize}
item test
item
begin{minipage}[t]{linewidth}
vspace*{-1.2baselineskip}
begin{theorem}
test
end{theorem}
end{minipage}
item test
end{itemize}
end{frame}

end{document}


enter image description here







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jan 6 at 15:07









samcartersamcarter

86.7k795279




86.7k795279













  • Simple but efficient! :-) Thanks.

    – user60121
    Jan 6 at 17:58











  • @user60121 You're welcome!

    – samcarter
    Jan 6 at 19:03



















  • Simple but efficient! :-) Thanks.

    – user60121
    Jan 6 at 17:58











  • @user60121 You're welcome!

    – samcarter
    Jan 6 at 19:03

















Simple but efficient! :-) Thanks.

– user60121
Jan 6 at 17:58





Simple but efficient! :-) Thanks.

– user60121
Jan 6 at 17:58













@user60121 You're welcome!

– samcarter
Jan 6 at 19:03





@user60121 You're welcome!

– samcarter
Jan 6 at 19:03


















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