Sams Teach Yourself Microsoft Office 2003 in 24 Hours
- Table of Contents
- Copyright
- About the Author
- Acknowledgments
- We Want to Hear from You!
- Introduction
- Who Should Read This Book?
- What This Book Does for You
- Can This Book Really Teach Office 2003 in 24 Hours?
- Conventions Used in This Book
- Part I. Working with Office 2003
- Hour 1. Getting Acquainted with Office 2003
- Part II. Processing with Word 2003
- Hour 2. Welcome to Word 2003
- Hour 3. Formatting with Word 2003
- Hour 4. Managing Documents and Customizing Word 2003
- Hour 5. Advanced Word 2003
- Part III. Computing with Excel 2003
- Hour 6. Understanding Excel 2003 Workbooks
- Hour 7. Restructuring and Editing Excel 2003 Worksheets
- Hour 8. Using Excel 2003
- Hour 9. Formatting Worksheets to Look Great
- Hour 10. Charting with Excel 2003
- Part IV. Presenting with Flair
- Hour 11. PowerPoint 2003 Presentations
- Hour 12. Editing and Arranging Your Presentations
- Hour 13. PowerPoint 2003 Advanced Features
- Hour 14. Animating Your Presentations
- Part V. Organizing with Outlook 2003
- Hour 15. Communicating with Outlook 2003
- Hour 16. Planning and Scheduling with Outlook 2003
- Part VI. Tracking with Access 2003
- Hour 17. Access 2003 Basics
- Hour 18. Entering and Displaying Access 2003 Data
- Hour 19. Retrieving Your Data
- Hour 20. Reporting with Access 2003
- Part VII. Combining Office 2003 and the Internet
- Hour 21. Office 2003 and the Internet
- Hour 22. Creating Web Content with Word, Excel, Access, and PowerPoint
- Part VIII. Publishing Eye-Catching Documents
- Hour 23. Publishing with Flair Using Publisher 2003
- Hour 24. Adding Art to Your Publications
- Part IX. Appendixes
- Appendix B. Business Contact Manager and Office Extras
- Part X. Bonus Hours
- Hour 25. Using FrontPage 2003 for Web Page Design and Creation
- Hour 26. Managing Your Web with FrontPage
Using the Outline
An outline helps you organize your presentation and sequence the slides properly. Although PowerPoint makes it easy for you to create the presentation slides themselves, the outline is easier to work with than the full slides, especially when you are still in the process of gathering your thoughts on the presentation's content. If you get in the habit of first working on the presentation's outline (after the AutoContent Wizard generates the presentation), you have less editing and slide rearranging to do later in the development of your presentation.
After you generate a sample presentation by using the AutoContent Wizard or by creating slides from the design templates, use the outline to work on your presentation's details. You can reorganize your slides and edit text in this mode. Click the topic or detail you want to change and edit the text. As you enter and change outline text, PowerPoint updates that individual slide in the slide pane so that you also see the results of your edit to the outline.
All the familiar copy, cut, and paste features work in the outline. If you drag a title's icon or a bulleted list's item down or up the outline area, for example, PowerPoint moves that item to its new location. When you drag a title, all the points under the title move with it. This is a good way to reorganize slides. When you drag an individual bulleted item, PowerPoint moves only that item.
Adding and Importing New Items
To add items to the text in the Slide tab's outline, click at the end or beginning of a bulleted item and press Enter to insert a new entry. If you want to insert a completely new slide, click the New Slide toolbar button, and PowerPoint displays the Slide Layout task pane from which you can select a design and then enter the text. You can also click at the end of an item and press Enter to enter a new slide.
One of PowerPoint's most beneficial text features is its capability to read documents from other Office products. If you create a Word document that you want to include on a slide (or series of slides), select Insert, Slides from Outline and select the Office file that you want to import to your presentation. The file does not have to be in an outline format. For example, you can insert a Word file that is either a Word document or a Word outline file.
As with all Office 2003 products, PowerPoint also recognizes HTML documents so that you can import or save Web page content directly within a presentation.
Promoting and Demoting Elements
From the Normal view, click the Outline tab to display the outline. When you select View, Toolbars, Outlining, the Outlining toolbar appears to the left of the Outline tab area as Figure 12.2 shows. The Outlining toolbar's most important buttons might be its promotion arrows. If you type a detail item that you want to become a new slide's title, click the left arrow of the Outline toolbar (the Promote button). To convert a title to a bulleted item, click the right arrow of the Outline toolbar (the Demote button).
Figure 12.2 Buttons on the Outlining toolbar enable you to manipulate the outline.
Working on the Slide | Next Section

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