1 / 40

Begin with one of these: Blank presentation

1. Begin with one of these: Blank presentation Plain background with simple text treatments and minimal color use. Theme A background design with uniform colors and font styles, and placeholder positioning for a unified and professional appearance. Template

shiro
Télécharger la présentation

Begin with one of these: Blank presentation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 1 Begin with one of these: • Blank presentation • Plain background with simple text treatments and minimal color use. • Theme • A background design with uniform colors and font styles, and placeholder positioning for a unified and professional appearance. • Template • A theme that also include sample content to guide in developing a presentation.

  2. Exercise 2-1 1 • Start PowerPoint. A blank title slide appears, ready for your text input. If PowerPoint is already open, • Click the File tab and choose New. • Choose Blank Presentation and click Create. Figure 2-1

  3. Add New Slides and Use Slide Layouts Exercise 2-2 1 Use one of these methods to insert a new slide: • From the Home tab, • in the Slides group, click the New Slide button. • Press <Ctrl> + <M>. • When a placeholder is selected, press <Ctrl> + <Enter> one or more times. Figure 2-2

  4. Add New Slides and Use Slide Layouts Exercise 2-2 1 To select slide layouts: • From the Home tab, in the Slides group, click the down arrow on the New Slide button. • Click the slide layout thumbnail. Slide layouts Figure 2-3

  5. Change the Font Face and Font Size 2 • A font is a set of characters with a specific design. • The font face (such as Times New Roman, Garamond, Corbel, or Arial). Most fonts are TrueType shown by the icon in front of the name Figures 2-4 and 2-6

  6. Change the Font Face and Font Size Exercise 2-3 2 • The font size is measured in points (72 points to an inch) indicating how tall a font is. Font command buttons Figures 2-5 and 2-7

  7. Exercise 2-4 2 • Apply text attributes to change the appearance of text. • text style (such as bold or italic) • text effect (such as underline or shadow) • Click the Font Color button to change text colors. Font Group Theme Colors Theme Color Percentages Standard Colors Font Color Gallery Figure 2-8

  8. Exercise 2-5 2 • The Change Case button can change any text to: • Sentence case • Lowercase • UPPERCASE • Capitalize Each Word • tOGGLE cASE Figure 2-9

  9. Exercise 2-6 2 • Bulleted items are considered paragraphs. • Default spacing is 1.0; larger numbers increase space to spread text. • Increased line spacing can make text easier to read. • The Line Spacing button will change the space by increments of 0.5 lines. Figure 2-10

  10. Exercise 2-7 2 • Click within a bulleted item then, in the Paragraph group, click the Dialog Box Launcher to open the Paragraph dialog box. • Change the Before and After spacing. Controls spacing above and below bulleted text lines or paragraphs Figure 2-11

  11. Exercise 2-8 2 • Open the Font dialog box by clicking the Font group Dialog Box Launcher. Figure 2-12

  12. Exercise 2-9 3 • Click the border of an active placeholder with the four-pointed arrow. • Press <Esc> while a placeholder is active (when the insertion point is in the text). • Press <Tab> to select the next placeholder (only when a text box or text placeholder is not active).

  13. Exercise 2-9 3 Dashed line indicates text can be edited Solid line indicates the entire placeholder can be edited Figure 2-13

  14. Exercise 2-9 3 • Press <Esc> to deselect a placeholder or other object. • (Press <Esc> twice if active for editing text.) • Click an area of the slide where there is no object.

  15. Exercise 2-10 3 • Align paragraphs • with either the left or right placeholder borders. • center them within the placeholder. • justify long paragraphs so both margins are even. • Change text alignment for • all the text in a placeholder. • for just one line, depending on what is selected. Center alignment

  16. Exercise 2-11 3 • Drag a sizing handle to change the size and shape of a text placeholder. • Placeholder size and position settings can also be changed using the Format Shape dialog box. Sizing handles Figure 2-14

  17. Exercise 2-12 3 • Drag the placeholder border to move the text to a new position. Border shows new size and new position Four-pointed arrow Figure 2-15

  18. Exercise 2-13 4 • Select the body text placeholder. • From the Home tab, in the Paragraph group, click the Bullets button to turn bullets off for an entire placeholder and move the text to the left. • Click the Bullets button again to reapply the bullets.

  19. Exercise 2-14 4 • To indent listed text by moving it to the right: • Click the Increase List Level button. • Press <Tab>. • To remove an indent in listed by moving it to the left: • Click the Decrease List Level button. • Press <Shift> + <Tab>. Increase list level Decrease list level

  20. Change the Color and Shape of a Bullet Exercise 2-15 4 • Choose bullets from the gallery. • Click Bullets and Numbering to open the Bullets and Numbering dialog box. Choose a bullet Figure 2-16

  21. Change the Color and Shape of a Bullet Exercise 2-15 4 • Click Color button to select a different bullet color • Change bullet size by increasing or decreasing the percentage number. Choose bullet size as a percentage of the font size Figure 2-17

  22. Change the Color and Shape of a Bullet Exercise 2-15 4 • Fonts that contain potential bullet characters include Symbol, Wingdings, and Webdings. • The Geometric Shapes subset includes bullet characters. Selected bullet character Figure 2-18

  23. Exercise 2-16 4 • From the Home tab, in the Paragraph group, click the Bullets button and choose Bullets and Numbering. • Click the Picture button. • Key an appropriate search word and then click Go. • Click the picture to select it and then click OK. Selected picture bullet Figure 2-19

  24. Exercise 2-17 4 • Use the Numbered tab in the Bullets and Numbering dialog box. • apply a variety of numbering styles, including numbers, letters, and Roman numerals. • Create a numbered list automatically while you key body text.

  25. Adjust Paragraph Indents Exercise 2-18 4 Types of Paragraph Indents: • Normal indent—All the lines of the paragraph are indented the same amount from the left margin. • Hanging indent—The first line of the paragraph extends farther to the left than the rest of the paragraph. • First-line indent—Only the first line of the paragraph is indented.

  26. Adjust Paragraph Indents Exercise 2-18 4 Use the dialog box: • From the Home tab, in the Paragraph group, click the Dialog Box Launcher to open the Paragraph dialog box. • Use the list box to choose a different indent type. Paragraph indent types Figure 2-20

  27. Adjust Paragraph Indents Exercise 2-18 4 Use the Ruler: • Move indent markers • Increase space after bullet for even word wrapping Horizontal ruler Indent markers Vertical ruler Figures 2-21 and 2-22

  28. 5

  29. Exercise 2-19 5 • From the Insert tab, in the Text group, click the Text Box button. • Position the pointer, click, and a small text box containing an insertion point appears so you can enter text. Text box Figures 2-23 and 2-24

  30. Exercise 2-20 5 • Select the text box and change the font and font color using the same methods as with text placeholders. Text box Figure 2-25

  31. Exercise 2-21 5 • Rotate an object by dragging the green rotation handle that appears at the top of a selected object. • To constrain the rotation of an object to 15-degree increments, press <Shift> while rotating. Rotated text box Figure 2-26

  32. Exercise 2-22 5 • In a text box, word wrapping is automatically turned on so the insertion point automatically jumps to a new line when it gets to the right side of the box. • The height of the box automatically adjusts to accommodate additional text lines. Right alignment Figure 2-27

  33. Lesson 2 Presentation Text must always be easy to read. Once sizing, color use and alignment techniques are established, use them consistently throughout a presentation.

More Related