22.11.2016 Views

microsoft-office-professional-2010-step-by-step

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

Adding Text Boxes 393<br />

19. Type Know your customers, press Enter, and then type Know the current trends.<br />

20. Press Ctrl+Enter.<br />

Instead of creating another bullet, PowerPoint creates a new slide.<br />

If you know what text you want to appear on your slides, it is often quicker<br />

to work on the Outline tab.<br />

CLEAN UP Save the BuyingTripsA presentation, and then close it.<br />

Adding Text Boxes<br />

The size and position of the placeholders on a slide are dictated <strong>by</strong> the slide’s design.<br />

Every slide you create with a particular layout of a particular design has the same placeholders<br />

in the same locations, and the text you type in them has the same format.<br />

If you want to add text that does not belong in a placeholder—for example, if you want<br />

to add an annotation to a graphic—you can create an independent text box and enter<br />

the text there. You can create a text box in two ways:<br />

● You can click the Text Box button, click the slide where you want the text to appear,<br />

and then type. The text box grows to fit what you type on one line, even expanding<br />

beyond the border of the slide if necessary.<br />

● You can click the Text Box button, drag a box where you want the text to appear on<br />

the slide, and then type. When the text reaches the right boundary of the box, the<br />

height of the box expands <strong>by</strong> one line so that the text can wrap. As you continue<br />

typing, the width of the box stays the same, but the height grows as necessary to<br />

accommodate all the text.

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!