Fonts Characteristics
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When creating a presentation, Microsoft PowerPoint
assigns a font related to the method used to create the file. If you use
the AutoContent Wizard to create a presentation, the sample you select has
preset font characteristics. If you create a blank presentation, the
application has a default font that will be applied to the presentation. If you
change the Slides design of a presentation, each sample has its own set of
features that include the font. But at any time, you can change the font
to suit your own taste.
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Text formatting is the ability to change the look of
text. This involves the font face, the size of characters, the colors of
letters, or the alignment of paragraphs.
There are three main characteristics that govern the
appearance of a font you will be
using in your slides:
When selecting a font, your decision can start with
whether the text you are changing is a slide's main title, an item of the
main bulleted list of a slide, or a sub-item of a bulleted list. Serif
fonts can be used for the main title of a slide. Sans Serif fonts
can be used for text on bulleted lists or small titles. Graphics fonts are
used either as bullets or as special characters on a slide (or on the
master slide).
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Text Color
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The color is a value that represents a combination of
intensity between the red, green, and blue values. Text in your slides is
one of the objects that use colors. There are various ways you can change
the color of text in your slides. To change the font, you can use the
Formatting toolbar or the Font dialog box. If you are using the Font dialog box to
format text, it is equipped with a control that allows you to select,
edit, or create a color using an intermediary dialog box. You can also
change color without using the Font dialog box. The Drawing toolbar is
equipped with a button that is specially used to change the color of text.
If the Drawing toolbar is not visible, on the main menu, click View
-> Toolbars -> Drawing
You format text on an individual slide, one slide at
time, or all slides at the same time.
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A Microsoft Word Document as a Presentation Outline
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Introduction
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You or the person who wants a presentation may have
created a document from Microsoft Word already. You can use such a
document as the basis for a presentation. There are two main rules you should
observe: reduce the wording of the document, if necessary, and format the
document appropriately for a presentation.
Any document created in Microsoft Word can be
transferred to Microsoft PowerPoint and make it a presentation. Since
Microsoft Word was created as a text processor, it is meant to hold text,
of any length. This concept is hardly appropriate for a presentation. For
example, a presentation is meant to show highlighting points that would be
explained, usually by a presenter. Most of the people assisting to a
presentation would be far from the screen. If a slide contains too many
words and those words are small enough to fit in a slide, the people
viewing the presentation would not read them, making the presence of those
words useless. For this reason, if you have a text document you want to
use in a presentation, you should reduce its words and keep only the major
points.
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A Presentation From a Microsoft Word Outline
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To effectively use the contents of a text document in
a presentation, it should be formatted with headings. In Microsoft Word,
you can create headings as Heading 1, Heading 2, and Heading 3. Each line
formatted with Heading 1 would become the title of a slide. Each line
formatted with Heading 2 would become an item in the bulleted list of the
slide. Each line formatted with Heading 3 would become a sub-item of the
list.
Once the document is ready, to transfer it to
Microsoft PowerPoint, on the main menu of Microsoft Word, you can click
File -> Send To -> Microsoft PowerPoint. In Microsoft PowerPoint, a
new presentation would be created using the contents of the Microsoft Word
document.
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The following exercise is provided as an option. Perform it only if you have Microsoft Word and if you are planning to take the MOUS exam. |
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Bullets and Numbering
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Introduction
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The items in a slide is meant to serve as an outline
of points and references that would be addressed during a presentation.
For this reason, they are provided as a list. A list is referred to as
bullet when each item displays a bullet on its left side. When you type
text in the body of a slide, as you are pressing Enter, the bullets are
created automatically. If you create your presentation using a template or
the Design Templates of the New Presentation dialog box, the new
presentation is created and its bullets are formatted using preset
characteristics. If you create a blank presentation, the bullets added to
the slides are simple.
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Formatting Bullets and Numbering
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Whether you created your presentation using a template
or scratch, you can change or completely change the default bullets. To
change one bullet, you can right-click its line in the slide and click
Bullets and Numbering. Any change made would apply only to that bullet. To
change a group of bulleted items, select them, right-click the selection
and click Bullets and Numbering. Any change made would apply to all items
of the selection.
After clicking the Bullets and Numbering, the Bullets
and Numbering dialog box would appear. It allows you to change the type of
bullet that is currently used in the selected item(s). You can also change
the color used to paint the bullet. If you want to be fancier, you can use
either one of the sample bullets installed along with Microsoft PowerPoint
or you can use your own picture as a bullet. If you prefer the list to be
numbered, you can do this using the Numbered property page of the Bullets
and Numbering dialog box.
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MOUS Topics
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S20 | Import text from Microsoft Word |
S29 | Apply formatting |
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