Slide Creation
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Introduction
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If you create a presentation using either the
AutoContent Wizard or a design template, a presentation with ready-made slides would be
created for you. If you start a presentation from scratch, you would have
to create your own slides as you see fit. The primary difference is that,
the slides created from a presentation from scratch don't have any design:
they are presented with a white background. This gives you complete
freedom to customize their appearance.
Whether you start a presentation from scratch or you
are using an already created presentation, you can add or insert a new
slide any time. If you work from a blank presentation, a new slide would
appear empty. If the presentation already has a design, that design would
automatically be applied to it.
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If you start a new presentation from scratch, you must
create a new slide every time you need one. To create a slide, you can
select one from the Slide Layout. To display the Slide Layout:
There are two broad categories of slides used in a
Microsoft PowerPoint presentation:
To make a presentation fun, the slides use different
layout, offering you automatic items such as lists, placeholders for
pictures, charts, etc.
Although a slide can contain just about any type of
graphic design, the
primary content of a slide is text. If you create a presentation from
scratch, you would be presented with empty slides. In this case, you must
add text as you see fit. To make it easy to manipulate its content, the
text of a slide is entered into "physical" objects called text
boxes. In future lessons, we will learn that this allows you to move a
whole block of text as if it were a picture.
Text of a slide is typically divided in two sections.
The title in the top section gives an outline of the particular subject
that would be discussed while the slide is displaying. Under the title,
there is a text box that contains a bulleted list. The items in the
bulleted list can also contain sub-items.
When you add a new slide, it appears with
placeholders for text. The title displays "Click to add title".
To change it, simply click that line and start typing. To move from the
title to the other section, you can click its "Click to add
text" line or you can press Ctrl + Enter. In this case also, you can
just start typing.
The sample presentations that Microsoft PowerPoint
provide allow you to easily create a presentation using an already
formatted document. The outline of those presentations will hardly fulfill
what you
want your presentation to contain. In this case you would have to change
the text in the slides. Another type of situation you may encounter is if
somebody such as your boss, a friend or a customer wants you to create a
presentation based on items he or she wants to include in a presentation.
Fortunately Microsoft PowerPoint can accept almost text created in almost
any format and include it in a presentation. This means that you can use
an ASCII text document or a Microsoft Word file, etc.
Microsoft PowerPoint is ready to accept just about any
type of text in its slides, even including a whole book. But, because
Microsoft PowerPoint is a presentation software and not a regular text
editor, you should prepare an outline that would be used. If a boss, a
friend or a customer hands you a piece of text or a document that should
be used as the content of the presentation, either you or the other person
can prepare it first.
To prepare an outline that would be used in a
presentation, its text must be formatted as a list. The list doesn't need
to be professional. Including one item per line is a good start. This also
means that each line of item should be explicit enough but short so that
it can fit on one (short) line. Each line can also have a sub-item. Such a
sub-item can easily be created by pressing Tab before typing its text.
In the above section, we were simulating the idea of somebody giving you an outline for a presentation. In some other cases,
you would have to create a presentation from your own text. To make it
more original, you may also want to work from a blank presentation so you would
show your own design.
As mentioned already, to create a blank presentation,
when Microsoft PowerPoint starts, you can select the Blank Presentation
radio button and proceed from there.
If you create a presentation using either AutoContent
Wizard or a template, a design would be automatically applied to the slides of your
presentation. You may not like that design or you may find it incomplete.
To solve this problem, you can add new objects or change the appearance of
objects in the slides. If you created a blank presentation, the slides
would not receive a design. You can create your own design and apply it to
the slides. In future lessons, we will learn how to address these two
issues.
If you are familiar with the designs offered by
Microsoft PowerPoint templates, you can apply any of them to your
presentation. This allows you either to change the design of a
presentation created using the AutoContent Wizard or a template,
or to apply a ready-made design to a blank presentation.
If you have been handed the outline of a presentation or you
create your own outline, instead of creating a blank presentation without a
design, you can select a design and automatically apply it.
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The quickest way to apply a fancy background to a
blank presentation is to assign one of the designs that ship with
Microsoft PowerPoint. These are good and already formatted designs ready
to complete a presentation with an already configured set.
To apply one the designs to a presentation:
The available designs would appear on the
right side of the screen. You can then click the desired design.
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