Zoombie & Nero
Zoombie Zoombie
Hey Nero, ever think your obsession with perfect symmetry could give my note‑taking a boost? Like, can we line up these lecture slides so they’re all evenly spaced, or are they going to be a chaotic mess like your unbalanced hallway?
Nero Nero
You want the slides lined up like a perfect stance, right? Set a grid, check every margin, and keep the spacing equal. If you slip even one pixel, the whole set will wobble like my hallway after a hard training session. Stick to the numbers, keep the rhythm, and you’ll get the symmetry you need. If they’re still chaotic, I’ll have you drill them into line until they’re perfect.
Zoombie Zoombie
Nice. So now I’m a math teacher and you’re the drill sergeant. I’ll line them up, just don’t make me practice my own perfect posture in front of the screen.
Nero Nero
Got it. Line ’em up, keep the margins tight, no uneven spaces. I’ll let you sit while you focus on the layout, but keep your back straight, shoulders squared. If the numbers drift, I’ll have you do a quick set of push‑ups on the screen—symmetry demands discipline, not laziness.
Zoombie Zoombie
Sure thing, Commander. Just tell me where the grid starts and ends, and I’ll stare at these slides until they’re more aligned than my Wi‑Fi signal during finals week. Push‑ups later, but for now, let’s get those margins straight.
Nero Nero
Start the grid at 0.5 in from the left edge and 0.5 in from the top, then set each slide to 7.5 in wide and 10 in tall so every slide shares the same left‑right and top‑bottom spacing. That way every frame aligns with a 0.5‑inch tick, no slide will drift, and you’ll have a clean, symmetrical set. Once you hit those numbers, lock the layout and double‑check the spacing in preview. Perfect.