Now that we've got our slides, as I said, you've got a preview here with with all of the content of each of them. If you do want to re-order these slides just for your presentation export from Figma, you can feel free to do that and it won't mess around with your actual layer order in your original presentation design, that'll all be left alone, but the Pitchdeck Figma plugin will look at this order as the source of truth. So, Pitchdeck kind of accounts for this by default and assumes that you've done your design that way, and it'll order it in reverse to correct the order from start to finish but having said that, if if you do need to re-order the slides or if you've done it a different way, you can very easily re-order them just by hovering on any of these "drag" icons in the slide panel on the left here in the Figma plugin, and if you click and drag you can simply just re-order those frames or those slides you can see here we've just moved number one down to number four, I can move that back you can move any of these around in any order and these are completely disconnected from your Figma design order. The one thing to note is that the ordering is exactly reversed from the ordering that we see over here in the left-hand side in Figma we can see at the bottom of this list we've got "intro" and then gradually working its way up from "principle one" to "ten", but in Figma, in the Pitchdeck Figma plugin here, you can see "intro" is actually coming first, and then it goes from "one" to "ten" after that and the reason it does that is because typically when you're designing something like a pitch deck or a slide deck as a collaborative presentation in Figma, usually you'll create a slide and you'll be happy with that layout, and you might want to copy paste it and when you copy paste it, Figma will paste it next to the slide that you already had (which is great), but it also adds the new layer on top of any of the old layers that you already had it effectively keeps layering upwards instead of in in the reverse. Okay, it's gone through and it's looked at all of our frames, and you can see here that we've got a list of 11 frames from our collaborative presentation slide deck design, and they all look as you'd expect them to look. Make sure you're running this in a file that just contains the slides or the frames that you want in your deck if you do have other frames in there, it's going to treat them as slides, too. To do that we need to run the Figma plugin we just installed by right clicking anywhere, going to "plugins", and then clicking on "Pitchdeck Presentation Studio", and once you do that it's going to fire up the Figma plugin that we just installed, and it's going to look through all of your frames on the left hand side here, and it's going to treat each of those frames as an individual slide in your slide deck. I've just jumped back into my Figma design, and this is just a collaborative presentation slide deck that I designed in Figma based on Dieter Rams' "10 principles for good design" it's just 11 slides, and what I want to do today is take get slides outside of Figma to Keynote and make this into a real presentation that I can use. I've already got it installed and that's why I've got this little check mark here and it says "installed", but if you don't, this button on the right hand side will say "install", and if you click on that it'll change to look like mine, and once it does you'll be ready to go. If you haven't already done that, you can do it by clicking on the top left Figma icon in the toolbar up here, and if you go to community or plugins and search for the term "pitchdeck", you'll see a result called "Pitchdeck Presentation Studio" pop-up. To do that, we need to install a Figma plugin called "Pitchdeck". Today, I'm going to be showing you how to export your collaborative presentation designs from Figma to Keynote (or Keynote file), that you'll be able to open on your computer and present as a real presentation outside of Figma based on your own slide deck designs.
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