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PowerPoint 2007 for Starters: The Missing Manual
PowerPoint 2007 for Starters: The Missing Manual

By E. A. Vander Veer
Book Price: $19.99 USD
£13.99 GBP
PDF Price: $15.99

Cover | Table of Contents


Table of Contents

Chapter 1: Creating a Basic Presentation
  • Beginning a New Presentation
  • Choosing a Theme for Your Presentation
  • Adding Text
  • Adding More Slides
  • Moving Around Inside a Presentation
  • Adding Speaker Notes
  • Creating and Printing Handouts
  • Saving and Closing a Presentation
  • Running a Presentation
This chapter will familiarize you with powerpoint 2007 by walking you through the creation of a basic bullets-and-background slideshow presentation. You'll learn how to create a new slideshow, choose a look and feel, add text and slides, print speaker notes and handouts, and finally, how to unveil your masterpiece.
You've got two basic choices when it comes to creating a new presentation:
  • You can start from scratch, using a blank canvas. If you're familiar with earlier incarnations of the PowerPoint program, or if you're interested in learning the ins and outs of PowerPoint quickly, then you'll probably want to choose this option. (As daunting as "from scratch" sounds, you don't have to do all the work yourself; Section 1.1.2.2 shows you how to apply a canned look and feel—or theme—to your new presentation.)
  • You can create a new presentation based on an existing template, theme, or presentation. A template is a generic presentation file designed for you to reuse. Complete with themes (see the box in Section 1.1.2.3), background images, and even generic content (such as page numbers and placeholder text), templates let you jump-start your presentation by giving you everything you need
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Beginning a New Presentation
You've got two basic choices when it comes to creating a new presentation:
  • You can start from scratch, using a blank canvas. If you're familiar with earlier incarnations of the PowerPoint program, or if you're interested in learning the ins and outs of PowerPoint quickly, then you'll probably want to choose this option. (As daunting as "from scratch" sounds, you don't have to do all the work yourself; Section 1.1.2.2 shows you how to apply a canned look and feel—or theme—to your new presentation.)
  • You can create a new presentation based on an existing template, theme, or presentation. A template is a generic presentation file designed for you to reuse. Complete with themes (see the box in Section 1.1.2.3), background images, and even generic content (such as page numbers and placeholder text), templates let you jump-start your presentation by giving you everything you need except your specific content. If you're creating a presentation for your local school board, for example, then you'll need to add the content that describes your findings, conclusions, and suggestions.
    Templates are the better option when you need to crank out a presentation in a jiffy. PowerPoint comes with a handful of professionally designed templates and themes, but you can also create presentations based on a template, theme, or presentation that you've previously created, or one that you've found online and downloaded onto your computer.
When you launch PowerPoint, the program starts you off with a brand-new presentation cleverly named Presentation1 (Figure 1-1).
Figure 1-1: PowerPoint calls this a "blank" presentation even though technically it's not blank at all: It contains placeholders for the first slide's title and subtitle. Section 1.2 shows you how to change the Office theme that PowerPoint hands you to something more colorful and more artfully laid out.
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Choosing a Theme for Your Presentation
No matter which approach you use to create a presentation—from scratch, from an existing presentation, from a template, or from a built-in theme—once you have a presentation, you can change how it looks in one fell swoop by changing its theme.
A theme is a collection of characteristics including colors, fonts, and graphic effects (such as whether the shapes you add to your slides have drop shadows). For example, applying the built-in Deluxe theme turns your background a tasteful shade of blue and displays your title text (which appears in the Corbel font) in an attractively contrasting, gently shadowed shade of yellow—all thanks to the theme. You can change all of these characteristics individually, of course, as you'll see in Chapter 4. But applying themes gives you more bang for your buck in several important ways:
  • Using themes is quicker than changing individual settings one at a time. Applying a theme is a two-click proposition. Changing the dozen-plus settings controlled by a theme would exercise your click finger a lot more than that. And themes save you time you'd otherwise spend figuring out which colors look good together.
  • Using themes helps ensure a decent-looking, readable slide. Consistency is an important design principle: it sets the tone for your presentation and lets your audience focus on your message. When you change settings manually, you can end up with a distracting mishmash of colors and fonts on a single slide or across slides. Not so with themes. Once you apply a theme, the theme takes control of your settings. If you change the background color of your slides, then the theme automatically changes the title and subtitle fonts to compatible colors—colors that aren't just readable against your new background, but attractive, too.
  • Using themes lets you create a consistent look and feel across Microsoft Office-produced materials
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Adding Text
You'll want to add at least some text to most, if not all, PowerPoint presentations you create. (See the box in Section 1.3.2 for advice on how much prose to add to your presentation.) Knowing that, the PowerPoint designers made it easy for you to add text to your slides. The following sections show you how.
When you start to work with a new presentation, the ribbon displays the Home tab (Figure 1-13).
Figure 1-13: Until you click a text box, most of the options appear grayed out, meaning you can't use them. See Figure 1-14 for a glimpse of the subtitle box.
Blank presentations come complete with title and subtitle placeholder text boxes. To replace the placeholder text in either of these two text boxes with your own text, simply click inside the placeholder and begin typing. When you do, two things happen:
  • PowerPoint displays the Drawing Tools | Format tab and, on the Home ribbon, activates many of the text formatting options (Figure 1-14). You can use these options to change the font, size, and color of your text, turn your text into a right-justified paragraph or a bullet point, and much more. (Chapter 3 describes your options in detail.)
  • Resize and transform handles appear at the corners and edges of the text box (Figure 1-14). Tiny white resize handles, which are square on the edges of the text box and circular on the corners, let you stretch or shrink your text box by dragging them. The circular green transform handle appears above the top of your text box and lets you tilt it. Drag the handles to tilt or resize your text box.
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Adding More Slides
When you create a new blank presentation, PowerPoint spots you one slide. But in most cases, you'll want your presentation to contain a lot more slides than that. Fortunately, adding a new slide is easy, as you'll see in the following sections.
PowerPoint gives you two options: adding a slide with layout identical to the current slide, and specifying a different slide layout. A slide layout is a description of what content appears where on a slide. For example, applying a Title Slide layout to a slide positions title and subtitle text placeholders near the middle of your slide, and nothing else. Applying a Title and Content layout positions a title text placeholder near the top of a slide, and an object placeholder beneath that.
To add a slide with a layout identical to the current slide:
  1. Select any non-title slide.
    PowerPoint doesn't automatically duplicate title slides for a pretty obvious reason: 99 percent of the time, you don't want two title slides in a single presentation. For the one percent of the time when that's exactly what you want, add a slide, and then change the slide's layout to Title Slide as shown in Section 4.1.
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Moving Around Inside a Presentation
Moving around your presentation when you only have one slide isn't much of an issue. But once you start adding slides, you'll want a way to hop quickly from your first slide to your last. You'll also want to jump to specific slides in the middle of your presentation; for example, to tweak a particular slide's layout, to add content, or to delete it.
PowerPoint gives you several ways to flip through your presentation. This section acquaints you with the easiest and most useful options: using your workspace scroll bar, using the View pane on the left side of the screen, and using the Home ribbon's Find function.
Figure 1-18: The appearance and number of slide layouts you see in this menu depend on the theme (and template, if any) you've applied to your presentation. If you add a slide and then change your mind, you can either click Undo (Ctrl+Z), or delete the slide by choosing Home → Delete.
In PowerPoint, you see a scroll bar on the right side of your workspace similar to the one in Figure 1-19.
To scroll through your presentation, all you need to do is click the scroll bar and drag up (to scroll toward the beginning of your presentation) or down (to scroll toward the end). As you go, PowerPoint displays each slide in turn.
To flip forward (or back) through your presentation one slide at a time, click the Next Slide (or Previous Slide) arrow shown in Figure 1-19.
Figure 1-19: If you've got more than one slide, the vertical scroll bars always appear in PowerPoint, no matter which tab you select or which ribbon appears at the top of your workspace. Scrolling tells PowerPoint to display slides not just in the main workspace, but also to display thumbnail versions in the Slides pane.
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Adding Speaker Notes
Speaker notes are optional text notes you can type into PowerPoint. You can associate a separate speaker note with each slide of your presentation. Your audience can't see speaker notes, but you can. You may find speaker notes useful:
  • While you're putting your presentation together. If you know you need to add a graphic to slide six and a couple of bullet points to slide 33, then you can jot down reminders to yourself in the Speaker Notes pane (Figure 1-23). Then, before you put your presentation to bed, you can view your speaker notes and double-check that you've caught everything.
  • While you're delivering your presentation. You can set up your presentation so that your audience sees your slideshow on the screen while you see your notes (on your own computer monitor). Or, if you're the tactile type, you may prefer to print out your speaker notes and keep them with your during your presentation.
To add speaker notes for a particular slide, click in the Speaker Notes pane (Figure 1-23) and type away.
Figure 1-23: Speaker notes are specific to individual slides, so when you select a new slide, PowerPoint displays a fresh, clean Speaker Notes pane. You can make the pane bigger by dragging the resize handle.
If you don't see the Speaker Notes pane, then click the Speaker Notes pane's resize bar at the bottom of the workspace and drag upward, as shown in Figure 1-24.
Figure 1-24: Depending on the view you choose, the Speaker Notes pane doesn't always appear automatically—and it's not obvious that you can drag the resize bar at the bottom of the workspace to display it. Fortunately, you can. The farther you drag, the larger the notes display (and the smaller the slide display).
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Creating and Printing Handouts
You don't have to do anything special to create handouts in PowerPoint. That's because handouts in PowerPoint are nothing more than slides printed one or more to a page.
To print handouts:
  1. Select Office button → Print → Print Preview.
    The Print Preview ribbon appears, and PowerPoint's best guess at how you want your handouts printed appears in the workspace.
  2. Click the "Print what" drop-down box and then, from the menu that appears, choose how you want PowerPoint to print your handouts (Figure 1-25).
    PowerPoint redisplays the handouts preview based on your selection.
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Saving and Closing a Presentation
Lightning storms hit, coffee cups spill, and power cords work themselves out of walls (especially if you have a dog who likes to chase squeaky toys). After you've created a new presentation file and spent some time working on it, you'll want to save it every so often so that when your system crashes, you can recover your work. And if you're like most folks, you'll also want to save and close your presentation each time you wrap up a work session.
Saving and closing a PowerPoint presentation are both straightforward tasks. If you're familiar with any other Windows programs, then you'll recognize most of the steps.
To save a newly created presentation:
  1. Select Office button → Save.
    The Save As dialog box appears (Figure 1-26).
    Alternatively, you can press Ctrl+S or click the Save button (the little diskette icon) that appears in the Quick Access toolbar.
  2. Click the "Save in" drop-down box to choose a directory to store your file in. In the File name field, type a new name for your file.
    Shoot for short, unique, and memorable; you don't want to have to spend a lot of time hunting for your file a week from now.
  3. Click the "Save as Type" drop-down box to select a file format. Most of the time, you'll choose the .pptx format.
    The box in Section 1.9 explains your options. For example, to save your presentation as a template that you can use over and over, choose .potx.
  4. Click Save.
    The Save As dialog box disappears and PowerPoint saves the file in the format you specified.
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Running a Presentation
Chapter 7 shows you everything you need to know about setting up and running special types of presentations: for example, recording narration, hiding certain slides, and creating stand-alone presentations that run on kiosks. But for running through a basic presentation on your very own computer, the process is simple:
  1. Press F5 or click the Slideshow icon you see at the bottom of the screen, as shown in Figure 1-27 .
    PowerPoint replaces your workspace with a full-screen version of your slideshow, beginning with the currently selected slide.
    Figure 1-27: Clicking the Slideshow icon at the bottom of your workspace is one of the easiest ways to run your presentation.
    Pressing Shift+F5 and clicking the Slideshow icon both tell PowerPoint to run your slideshow beginning at the current slide (not necessarily the first slide). To run your slideshow from the beginning, you have three choices: press F5, click the Slideshow icon, or select Slide Show → Start Slide Show → From Beginning.
  2. Click the forward and backward arrows that appear at the bottom of the screen (Figure 1-28) to step through your presentation. (Figure 1-28 describes how to end the presentation before the last slide.)
    After the last slide, PowerPoint displays a black screen containing the words "End of slide show, click to exit."
    Figure 1-28: PowerPoint displays ghosted controls (Back, Ink, Slide, and Next) when you run a presentation. Mousing over these controls highlights them so you can see where to click. To end your slideshow immediately without having to flip through every last slide, you have two choices: either hit Esc or click the Slide icon and then, from the menu that appears, choose End Show.
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Chapter 2: Editing Slides
  • Editing Text
  • Reversing an Action (Undo)
  • Finding and Replacing Text Automatically
  • Checking Spelling
  • Adding Special Characters
Text is the heart and soul of an effective PowerPoint presentation. But coming up with just the right words—and organizing them in just the right way—isn't always easy. Just as you would if you were constructing a presentation using a flip chart or overhead transparencies, you jot down a few bullet points, read through what you've written, think of a few additional points, change your mind, and end up deleting, rearranging, and editing your material over and over again until you've got every word on every page (slide) exactly right.
Fortunately, PowerPoint can help. In addition to the standard cut, copy, and paste operations, this chapter shows you how to use PowerPoint's Search and Replace feature to find words and phrases buried in long presentations and change (or delete) them quickly. And if spelling's not your speciality, PowerPoint can help you check it.
When you change the text on a PowerPoint slide—when you cut it, copy it, replace it, or move it around—what you're doing is editing your text. To see most of the editing tools PowerPoint offers, all you have to do is take a look at the ribbon's Home tab (Figure 2-1). The following sections describe each editing tool in detail.
In contrast, when you change the way your text looks—when you make it bold, italicize it, choose a different font or background color for it, and so on—what you're doing is formatting. Chapter 3 tells you all you need to know about formatting text.
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Editing Text
When you change the text on a PowerPoint slide—when you cut it, copy it, replace it, or move it around—what you're doing is editing your text. To see most of the editing tools PowerPoint offers, all you have to do is take a look at the ribbon's Home tab (Figure 2-1). The following sections describe each editing tool in detail.
In contrast, when you change the way your text looks—when you make it bold, italicize it, choose a different font or background color for it, and so on—what you're doing is formatting. Chapter 3 tells you all you need to know about formatting text.
Before you can do anything to the text on your slides, you first have to select it. Text can appear in any of three places on a slide: in one of the title or subtitle placeholder text boxes that PowerPoint automatically adds to your slide; in a text box that you've added to a slide (Section 1.3.2), or in a shape that you've added to a slide (Section 9.2.10).
Figure 2-1: Clicking the Home tab shows you your editing options, but you can't actually use any of them until you click inside a text box. When you do, PowerPoint activates the text editing options (except Paste and Clipboard, which remain grayed out until you cut or copy text; in other words, until you have something to paste from the Clipboard) and the Drawing Tools | Format tab appears.
To select text:
  1. Click anywhere in an existing text box, placeholder text box, or on a shape.
    PowerPoint highlights the outline of the text box you clicked in. In addition, PowerPoint displays the Drawing Tools/Format context tab and activates the text-related options in the Home tab—underlining, font size, alignment, and so on.
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Reversing an Action (Undo)
Undo is great for recovering from those slip-of-the-finger goofs everyone makes from time to time. Clicking the Undo button you see in the Quick Access toolbar (Figure 2-5) tells PowerPoint to reverse the last action you told it to take. If you cut some text and then select Undo, for example, PowerPoint puts the cut text back where it was (and removes the cut text from the Clipboard). If you paste some text and then select Undo, then PowerPoint removes the pasted text. If you just prefer pressing keys to using the mouse, you can reverse the last action by pressing Ctrl+Z.
Figure 2-5: As useful as Undo is, don't rely on it too much. Out of the box, PowerPoint only keeps track of the last 20 actions you took since the last time you opened your presentation, so you're out of luck if you want to undo the thing you did 21 keystrokes ago. Another reason not to rely on Undo is that, when you close your presentation, PowerPoint erases all record of the actions you took when the file was open.
If you click Undo and then change your mind, you can undo the effects of Undo and reapply your action. To do so, just head to the Quick Access toolbar and click Redo or press Ctrl+Y.
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Finding and Replacing Text Automatically
Imagine you're just putting the finishing touches on your presentation when you decide to check your email. There, in your virtual inbox, you see it: a memo informing you that Marketing just renamed the product you referred to throughout your presentation as "Sunny's Tomato Juice" to "Sunny's All-Natural Lycopene Infusion."
Fixing every occurrence by hand would take you forever, and you'd likely miss a few.
Fortunately, there's a better way. PowerPoint's Replace option can find all the occurrences of a particular word or phrase and replace them automatically with the text you specify.
If you want to use Find without Replace—for example, if all you want to do is check to make sure that you've included a specific phrase in your presentation and don't want PowerPoint to swap it out for you—check out Section 1.5.2.
To search for and replace text automatically:
  1. Press Ctrl+H or select Home → Editing → Replace.
    The Replace dialog box shown in Figure 2-6 appears.
  2. In the "Find what" box, type in the word or phrase you want to search for.
    For example, Tomato Juice.
  3. In the "Replace with" box, type in the text you want PowerPoint to substitute for the occurrences of "Find what" text it may (or may not) find.
    All-Natural Lycopene Infusion, in this example.
    Figure 2-6: Be sure to turn on the "Match case" checkbox as shown here if you want PowerPoint to look for a phrase that matches your "Find what" text exactly, capitalization and all.
    PowerPoint doesn't find occurrences of text buried inside pictures, charts, or diagrams, because these occurrences aren't text at all (to PowerPoint, at least). Using PowerPoint's Find and Replace options only helps you find (and replace) text in text boxes and shapes.
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Checking Spelling
Spelling errors are never a good thing. At best, they can give your audience the impression that you don't pay attention to details. At worst, they can actually prevent your audience from understanding what you're talking about. And make no mistake about it: the typo that no one but the former English teacher noticed when it appeared on a hard-copy handout is obvious to everyone when it's four feet high and splashed across a projector screen.
Spell checkers' suggestions aren't always right, and they can miss errors, too. What's more, studies suggest that some folks actually make more mistakes when they use spell checkers than when they don't because they rely on the tool instead of their own proofreading skills. A spell checker can be a timesaver, but it's no substitute for carefully reading through your presentation.
PowerPoint gives you two choices when it comes to spell checking your presentation. You can check as you go, automatically, or wait until you're finished with your presentation and then run the check manually.

Section 2.4.1.1: Setting up spelling

Whether you choose automatic spell checking or manual, you want to give PowerPoint a heads-up on what kinds of special words to look out for—words like company-specific acronyms, passwords, or other non-words that you want PowerPoint to skip during a spell check. To set spelling options:
  1. Select Office button → PowerPoint Options.
    The PowerPoint Options window appears.
  2. On the left side of the PowerPoint Options window, click the Proofing category to select it.
  3. Turn on the checkbox next to one or more of the following:
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Adding Special Characters
Because PowerPoint comes complete with a slew of fonts and character sets, you can add all kinds of special characters to your slides without having to have a souped-up keyboard. Mathematical signs, foreign currency symbols, umlauts, schwas, superscripted characters, and happy faces are just some of the special characters—or symbols—at your disposal. If for no other reason than to accent those e's in résumé, you want to familiarize yourself with inserting special characters.
Here's how you do so:
  1. Click in a text box and position your cursor where you want to insert the special character. Select Insert → Text → Symbol.
    The Symbol dialog box appears (Figure 2-11).
  2. From the Font drop-down menu, choose a font.
    The special characters you see vary depending on the font you choose, not just in appearance but in number.
  3. From the Subset drop-down menu, choose the type of symbol you're interested in.
    Alternatively, you can scroll through the symbol window to find the symbol you're looking for.
  4. Choose the symbol you want to insert, and then click Insert.
    PowerPoint inserts the selected symbol.
  5. Click Close to dismiss the Symbol dialog box.
    Figure 2-11: Not all fonts are created equal. The Webdings and Wingdings dingbat fonts, for example, eschew the business, mathematical, and linguistic (shown here) in favor of vector art: telephones, hearts, buildings, and other stylized drawings you can enlarge to create clean, simple graphics.
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Chapter 3: Formatting and Aligning Your Text
  • Automating Text Formatting
  • Manually Formatting Text Appearance
  • Manually Aligning and Indenting Text
  • Formatting Text Boxes
Content may be king, but presentation is queen. You're going to spend a lot of time choosing just the right text to add to your slides, so don't blow all that hard work by ignoring the way your text looks. If your text is hard to read or conveys a message counter to the point you're trying to make—if you choose whimsical, candy-colored fonts for a presentation introducing your company's expanded line of funeral services, for example—you're going to confuse (or even lose) your audience.
This chapter shows you how to format your text effectively. You'll find out how to choose fonts, colors, and special effects (such as underlining and shadowing) that support and strengthen your message (Figure 3-1), and how to avoid the effects that detract from it (Figure 3-2).
Figure 3-1: Effectively formatted text is easy to read and it subliminally reinforces the message you're trying to drive home. Here, a solid, "respectable" font, a sober blue-and-tan-and-white color scheme, and spare, businesslike layout all contribute to the seriousness of the message.
PowerPoint gives you more options for formatting text than a normal human being will ever need—everything from the basic (bold, italics, underlining) to the wacky (beveling, stacking, 3-D rotation). And it gives you two ways to take advantage of these options: automatically, and manually.
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Automating Text Formatting
PowerPoint gives you more options for formatting text than a normal human being will ever need—everything from the basic (bold, italics, underlining) to the wacky (beveling, stacking, 3-D rotation). And it gives you two ways to take advantage of these options: automatically, and manually.
Figure 3-2: Anyone who's spent time in corporate America has suffered through at least one presentation like this. While it's true that your message (and your audience) should dictate the formatting choices you make, getting carried away is never a good idea. Too many formatting bells and whistles can affect your message more negatively than no formatting at all.
  • Automatic. If you haven't finished adding text to your slides, you can turn on one or more of PowerPoint's automatic formatting features to tell the program to catch basic formatting and punctuation goofs for you as you type.
  • Manual. If you've already added text to your slides or want to apply fancy effects, you'll need to format your text manually—either by applying individual effects one at a time, or by applying one of PowerPoint 2007's predesigned styles.
In most cases, you'll want to use both automatic and manual formatting. The following sections show you how.
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Manually Formatting Text Appearance
While PowerPoint's automatic formatting options help with the grunt work of formatting the text on your slides, you should do some of the formatting yourself. After all, the program has no way of knowing which words or phrases you want to emphasize—which, when you get right down to it, is what formatting is all about. PowerPoint conveniently displays all of its text formatting options on the Home tab (Figure 3-7). A handful of the most commonly used formats also appear when you right-click text or when you select it, as shown in Figure 3-8.
Figure 3-6: The handiest way to deal with a ton of text is to wait until it overflows your text box and take one of PowerPoint's AutoFit suggestions. But if you're the impatient type—or if you know you're going to be adding a lot of text and want to resize the text box sooner rather than later—then the Format Text Effects dialog box, shown here, offers some of the same AutoFit options.
If you're the kind of person who simply can't stand pop-ups, you can turn off the Mini Toolbar. To do so, select Office button → PowerPoint Options and then, in the PowerPoint Options window that appears, select Popular and turn off the "Show Mini Toolbar on selection" checkbox.
Figure 3-7: Most of PowerPoint's text formatting options appear on the Home tab.
Figure 3-8: As soon as you right-click or select text, PowerPoint pops up the semi-transparent, or ghosted, Mini Toolbar shown here. Mouse over the Mini Toolbar and it becomes active, giving you a quick way to apply the most common formatting options (bold, italics, and so on).
Using the options you find on the Home tab, you can format individual characters and words by changing their color, font size, font, underlining, shadowing, and so on. You can format paragraphs by indenting them, turning them into bulleted or numbered lists, and by applying effects to them, such as rotating them or turning them into diagrams. The following sections show you how.
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Manually Aligning and Indenting Text
To effectively convey your message on a slide, your text must above all be readable. After all, your audience may have to read it across a large conference room, or on a small laptop monitor. Make things easier on your audience's eyes by making sure your words are neatly and attractively lined up.
Figure 3-15: PowerPoint offers a quick-pick gallery of the most popular text effects, including outlines, colored fills, and 3-D beveling.
Neatly arranged text can mean the difference between an easy-to-read, professional-looking slide, and a jumbled mess.
PowerPoint gives you two ways to align text:
  • You can align text with respect to its bounding placeholder box. For example, you can center heading text inside its box or position it flush left or flush right. If you've got a paragraph's worth of text, you can justify it (add spaces between the words so the ends of each line up) or turn it into two or more columns.
  • You can align a text placeholder box with respect to the slide it's on. This type of alignment's called layout, and it's covered in Section 4.1.3.
This section shows you how to align text with respect to its bounding placeholder box.
To align text:
  1. Click in a text box.
    The Drawing Tools | Format contextual tab pops up, and PowerPoint activates the formatting options on the Home tab.
  2. Go to Home → Paragraph and choose an alignment option.
    You can see examples in Figure 3-16, left:
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Formatting Text Boxes
In addition to formatting the text on your slides, you can also format the text boxes that surround the text by applying options such as visible borders, colored backgrounds, and 3-D effects. These options don't change the text inside the text boxes, just the text boxes themselves. Formatting a text box is a good way to draw your audience's attention to a specific bit of text.
To format a text box:
  1. Click anywhere in the text box you want to format. Choose Home → Drawing → Quick Styles.
    The gallery of effects you see in Figure 3-27 appears. As you mouse over each effect, PowerPoint previews the effect for you on your slide.
  2. Click to choose the effect you want.
    On your slide, PowerPoint automatically formats your text box.
Figure 3-27: Clicking Home → Drawing → Quick Styles lets you turn an ordinary text box into a 3-D button with the click of a mouse—great for emphasizing headings. For a more subtle effect, choose one of the outline options.
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Chapter 4: Formatting and Laying Out Your Slides
  • Changing Slide Layout
  • Changing Background Color
  • Reapplying Themes, Colors, and Fonts
In the previous chapter, you learned how to massage text into perfectly indented paragraphs, columns, and lists. Now it's time for the big picture. This chapter shows you how to format slide using layouts, and how to reapply a theme (see Section 1.2) or color scheme (a list of coordinating font colors). Finally—and most important when you're in a time crunch—you'll learn how to turn on PowerPoint's automatic formatting options.
Each time you create a slide—by creating a new presentation, or by adding a slide to an existing presentation—PowerPoint gives that slide a layout such as the Title Slide layout, with one title text placeholder near the top and one subtitle text placeholder near the middle of the slide. But you can change the layout of your slide at any time, either before you've added content to it or after. PowerPoint gives you several options for changing slide layout:
  • Apply canned layouts to your slides. You can tell PowerPoint to put a title at the top of a slide and two content placeholders (for text, pictures, and so on) side-by-side in the body of the slide.
  • Change orientation. You can change a landscape orientation (where the slide's wider than it is tall) to a portrait orientation (where the slide's taller than it is wide).
  • Reposition elements. You can drag text boxes and other objects (such as pictures) around on your slide to reposition them.
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Changing Slide Layout
Each time you create a slide—by creating a new presentation, or by adding a slide to an existing presentation—PowerPoint gives that slide a layout such as the Title Slide layout, with one title text placeholder near the top and one subtitle text placeholder near the middle of the slide. But you can change the layout of your slide at any time, either before you've added content to it or after. PowerPoint gives you several options for changing slide layout:
  • Apply canned layouts to your slides. You can tell PowerPoint to put a title at the top of a slide and two content placeholders (for text, pictures, and so on) side-by-side in the body of the slide.
  • Change orientation. You can change a landscape orientation (where the slide's wider than it is tall) to a portrait orientation (where the slide's taller than it is wide).
  • Reposition elements. You can drag text boxes and other objects (such as pictures) around on your slide to reposition them.
PowerPoint offers nine canned layouts you can use. Most of the time, you're going to want to apply these layouts before you add text to your slides, but you can apply them after, as well.
To apply a canned layout to your slide:
  1. Create a new slide (Section 1.4). Click any blank spot on your new slide.
    Make sure you don't click a text placeholder, picture, diagram, or other object.
  2. Choose Home → Slides → Layout.
    A layout gallery based on the template or theme you've applied to your slideshow appears. (You can also display the layout gallery by right-clicking the slide or the slide thumbnail you see in the Slides pane and then, from the context menu that appears, mousing over the Layout option.)
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Changing Background Color
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