Ms Powerpoint (Windows)
Ms Powerpoint (Windows)
Ms Powerpoint (Windows)
(Windows)
HOW TO MAKE A POWERPOINT PRESENTATION
A presentation is made up of
multiple slides, and now that you
know how to make one, you can delve
deeper into PowerPoint's capabilities.
1. Open a blank presentation again or start from
one you've already created.
A title slide
An agenda or table of contents slide
A slide that introduces the speaker
Various content slides (create different layouts
considering what kind of multimedia you'll
use)
4. Use the Duplicate Slides feature to save you
time.
While you usually can get away with the default slide size for most
presentations, you may
need to adjust it for larger presentations on weirdly sized displays. If you
need to do that, here's how.
• In the top-left corner, choose "File."
• Select "Page Setup
• Type the height and width of the background you'd like, and click "OK."
• A dialogue box will appear. Click "OK" again.
• Your background is resized!
Tip: Resize your slides before you add any objects to them or the
dimensions of your objects
will become
skewed.
3. Edit your slide template design.
MS Word (Windows)
Microsoft Word is the most ubiquitous word-processing
program on the market; it's intuitive
even for the
most technologically illiterate computer users and is backed
by the powerful Microsoft Office
suite.
Highlight a Square Field of Text
If you hold down the Alt key in Windows, or the
Option key on a Mac, while you click and drag your mouse,
you will be able to draw a box
within the
document that will highlight all the characters in that box. If
you ever wanted to create a
perfect square of
purple text in the middle of a chunk of text, that's how you'd
go about it.
Generate Random Text
If you need to add Lorem Ipsum into your document as a
placeholder, Word has you
covered. Just type:
=lorem(p,l) and replace the "p" with the number of
paragraphs you want, and replace the "l"
with the number
of sentences you need. You can also just include one number
in the parentheses and it will
create that many
paragraphs. When ready, place the cursor at the end of the
equation and hit Enter to
generate your text.
Add a Calculator to Word
Word has a built-in calculator that can help you solve equations right in
your document. First,
add it to the Word menu by navigating to File > Options > Quick Access
Toolbar and selecting All
Commands from the
drop-down menu. Locate Calculate, and click Add to move it to the
Quick Access Toolbar
column. Click OK to
return to your document.
You will notice that a small gray circle has been added to the top of your
Word document.
Now you can type
math equations, and if you highlight them, that icon will change color.
Press the icon and
Word will calculate
the answer
Highlight a Sentence With a Click
To quickly highlight an entire sentence, hold down the Ctrl
key in Windows, or Command key
on a Mac, and
click the beginning of the sentence. Word will take care of
the rest.
Hop Around to Editing Hotspots
Hitting Shift-F5 will allow you to cycle through the parts of
your document you've recently
edited. This trick
will even remember where you were editing last after you
re-open a document.
Write Text Anywhere
You can use Word as a whiteboard of sorts and easily place
text anywhere on the page. Just
click twice on any
place on the page and Word will allow you to start typing
there. Word automatically inserts
hard returns and
tabs to allow you to enter text. Avant garde poets, this
function is for you.
Auto-Update Date & Time
Under the Insert tab, click the Date & Time button and a
pop-up window will appear. Click the
date format
you want and then be sure to click the "update
automatically" box in the bottom-right corner.
Now the date
will automatically be updated every time you open (or print)
the document.
Convert to a PDF and HTML Doc
Word makes it easy to convert your doc to a PDF or HTML file. When you
"save as" a file,
you'll see a "Save as
type" pull-down menu, which will provide a bevy of options including PDF
and Web Page.
Note that the Web Page function can include a lot of extra code. This
won't necessarily affect
the page, but
can make things a little messy if you need to change anything. Another
option is to use a
free conversion site
like Word to Clean HTML, which—as the name implies—will create HTML
code from text
that is directly
copied and pasted from a Word doc.
Change Capitalizations the Easy Way
You can easily change the capitalization of any text with a
click of a button. Highlight a
selection and click on
the "Aa" pull-down menu to alter your text between
sentence case, all uppercase, or all
lowercase. You can
also make every word start with a capital letter and toggle
between cases.
Show Hidden Characters
If you are working on a complex document with different
styles, columns, and formats,
editing can quickly
become a tedious exercise. The best way to see what's going
on with your document's
formatting is to make
all the invisible marks (hard returns, soft returns, tabs,
spaces) visible. Press Ctrl-Shift-8 in
Windows or
Command-8 on a Mac.
Replace Invisible Characters and Formatting
The Find and Replace tool in Microsoft Word is a lifesaver.
You can quickly and easily make
mass changes
without having to hunt and peck for every instance of
something you need changed. But you
can also do a
Find and Replace for the hidden characters in your
document.
Click on the Find and Replace button in Word, then click
More in the dialogue box. Click on
Format to search
for formatting in your document—the pull-down menu
includes margins, font, styles, and line
spacing.
Insert Objects into Word
If you ever feel like your document could use a little
something added to the body copy,
Word allows you to
insert objects directly onto the page. Click Insert > Object to
open a dialogue box that shows
you what you can add. This is how you would add a chart to
your doc, but you can also
embed a PDF or an Excel
spreadsheet as well.
Insert Equations
You can add complex math equations into Word by click
Insert > Equation, and then
selecting the equation
you wish to add. Once it has been inserted into your doc,
you are free to change formatting
or replace letters
with numbers.
Protect Your Document
Word has a fair amount of built-in protection that will
encrypt your writing. Click File > Info to
manage
viewing and editing permissions, enable password
encryption, and create a password for the
Doc
The Search Box Is Your Friend