LibreOffice 3 5 Impress Guide
LibreOffice 3 5 Impress Guide
5 Impress Guide
Presentations in LibreOffice
Copyright
This document is Copyright 20112012 by its contributors as listed below. You may distribute it and/or modify it under the terms of either the GNU General Public License (http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html), version 3 or later, or the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/), version 3.0 or later. All trademarks in this guide belong to their legitimate owners.
Contributors
Peter Schofield T. Elliot Turner Low Song Chuan Michele Zarri Chad D. Lines Jaimon Jacob Jean Hollis Weber Muhammad Sufyan Zainalabidin Hazel Russman
Feedback
Please direct any comments or suggestions about this document to: [email protected]
Acknowledgments
This book is adapted and updated from the OpenOffice.org 3.3 Impress Guide. The contributors to that book are: Michele Zarri Agnes Belzunce Claire Wood Jared Kobos Nicole Cairns Jean Hollis Weber Peter Hillier-Brook Rachel Kartch Martin J Fox Rachel Kartch Dan Lewis Gary Schnabl Hazel Russman Paul Miller
Contents
Copyright..................................................................................................................................... 2
Preface.................................................................................................................................. 7
Who is this book for?................................................................................................................... 8 What's in this book?..................................................................................................................... 8 Where to get more help............................................................................................................... 8 What you see may be different.................................................................................................... 9 Using LibreOffice on a Mac.......................................................................................................... 9 What are all these things called?............................................................................................... 10 Who wrote this book?................................................................................................................. 11 Acknowledgements.................................................................................................................... 11 Frequently asked questions....................................................................................................... 11
Index.................................................................................................................................. 247
LibreOffice 3.5 Impress Guide 5
Preface
Help system
LibreOffice comes with an extensive Help system. This is your first line of support for using LibreOffice. To display the full Help system, press F1 or select LibreOffice Help from the Help menu. In addition, you can choose whether to activate Tips, Extended tips, and the Help Agent (using Tools > Options > LibreOffice > General). If Tips are enabled, place the mouse pointer over any of the icons to see a small box (tooltip) with a brief explanation of the icons function. For a more detailed explanation, select Help > What's This? and hold the pointer over the icon.
International support
Accessibility options
Mac equivalent
LibreOffice > Preferences Control+click z (Command) Shift+z+F5 z+T
Effect
Access setup options Open a context menu Used with other keys Open the Navigator Open the Styles and Formatting window
Preface
Figure 1: Dialog showing common controls: 1 = Tabbed page (not strictly speaking a control) 2 = Radio buttons (only one can be selected at a time) 3 = Checkbox (more than one can be selected at a time) 4 = Spin box (click the up and down arrows to change the number shown in the text box next to it, or type in the text box) 5 = Thumbnail or preview 6 = Drop-down list from which to select an item 7 = Push buttons
10
Acknowledgements
This book is adapted and updated from OpenOffice.org 3.3 Impress Guide. The contributors to that book are: Michele Zarri Jean Hollis Weber Dan Lewis Agnes Belzunce Peter Hillier-Brook Gary Schnabl Claire Wood Rachel Kartch Hazel Russman Jared Kobos Martin J Fox Paul Miller Nicole Cairns Rachel Kartch
Preface
11
What is Impress?
Impress is the presentation (slide show) program included in LibreOffice. You can create slides that contain many different elements, including text, bulleted and numbered lists, tables, charts, and a wide range of graphic objects such as clip-art, drawings and photographs. Impress also includes a spelling checker, a thesaurus, text styles, and background styles. This chapter introduces the Impress user interface and describes how to create a simple slide show using the Presentation Wizard. The other chapters in this guide explain all the features available in Impress that can be used to create more sophisticated slide shows. To use Impress for more than very simple slide shows requires some knowledge of the elements which the slides contain. Slides containing text use styles to determine the appearance of that text. Creating drawings in Impress is similar to using the Draw program included in LibreOffice. See the Draw Guide for more details on how to use the drawing tools.
Starting Impress
You can start Impress in several ways:
From the LibreOffice Start Center, if no component is open: click on the Presentation icon. From the system menu, the standard menu from which most applications are started. On
Windows, it is called the Start menu. On Linux with a Gnome desktop, it is called the Applications menu; on a KDE desktop, it is identified by the KDE logo. On Mac OS X, it is the Applications menu. Details vary with your operating system; see Chapter 1 in the Getting Started Guide.
From the LibreOffice Quickstarter, if it is present on your operating system. From any open component of LibreOffice: click the triangle to the right of the New icon on
the main toolbar and select Presentation from the drop-down menu, or choose File > New > Presentation from the menu bar.
When LibreOffice was installed on your computer, in most cases a menu entry for each component was added to your system menu. The exact name and location of these menu entries depend on the operating system and graphical user interface.
Note
When you start Impress for the first time, the Presentation Wizard is shown. Here you can choose from the following options:
Empty presentation, which gives you a blank document From template, which is a presentation designed with a template of your choice Open existing presentation Click Create to open the main Impress window.
For detailed instructions about how to use the Presentation Wizard, see Creating a new presentation on page 23. If you prefer not to use the Presentation Wizard, select the Do not show this wizard again option before clicking Create. You can enable the wizard again later under Tools > Options > LibreOffice Impress > General > New document, and select the Start with wizard option.
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Tip
Slides pane
The Slides pane contains thumbnail pictures of the slides in your presentation, in the order the slides will be shownunless you change the slide show order, as described in Chapter 9, Slide Shows. Clicking a slide in this pane selects it and places it in the Workspace. When a slide is in the Workspace, you can make any changes you like. Several additional operations can be performed on one or more slides simultaneously in the Slides pane:
Add new slides to the presentation. Mark a slide as hidden so that it will not be shown as part of the presentation. Delete a slide from the presentation if it is no longer needed.
Chapter 1 Introducing Impress 15
Rename a slide. Duplicate a slide (copy and paste) or move it to a different position in the presentation (cut
and paste). It is also possible to perform the following operations, although there are more efficient methods than using the Slides pane, as you will see later in this chapter:
Change the slide transition following the selected slide or after each slide in a group of
slides.
Change the sequence of slides in the presentation. Change the slide design. Change slide layout for a group of slides simultaneously.
Tasks pane
The Tasks pane has five sections. To expand the section you wish to use, click on the title bar of each section. Only one section at a time can be expanded. Master Pages Here you define the page (slide) style for your presentation. Impress includes several designs of Master Pages (slide masters). One of themDefaultis blank, and the rest have background and styled text.
Press F11 to open the Styles and Formatting window, where you can modify the styles used in any master page to suit your purposes. This can be done at any time. See Chapter 2, Using Slide Masters, Styles, and Templates for more information.
Tip
Layouts The layouts included in Impress are shown here. You can choose the one you want and use it as it is, or you can modify it to meet your own requirements. However, it is not possible to save custom layouts. Table Design The standard table styles are provided in this section. You can further modify the appearance of a table with the options to show or hide specific rows and columns, or to apply a banded appearance to the rows and columns. Refer to Chapter 3, Adding and Formatting Text, for details on how to work with tables. Custom Animation A variety of animations can be used to emphasize or enhance different elements of each slide. The Custom Animation section provides an easy way to add, change, or remove animations. See Chapter 9, Slide Shows, for an overview of how to add and customize animations. Slide Transition The Slide Transition section provides access to a number of slide transition options. The default is set to No Transition, in which the following slide simply replaces the existing one. However, many additional transitions are available. You can also specify the transition speed (slow, medium, fast), choose between an automatic or manual transition, and choose how long the selected slide should be shown (automatic transition only).
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Workspace
The Workspace (normally in the center) has five tabs: Normal, Outline, Notes, Handout, and Slide Sorter (Figure 3). These five tabs are called View buttons. The Workspace below the View buttons changes depending on the chosen view. The workspace views are described in detail on page 18.
Toolbars
Many toolbars can be used during slide creation; they can be displayed or hidden by clicking View > Toolbars and selecting from the menu. You can also select the icons that you wish to appear on each toolbar. For more information, refer to Chapter 11, Setting Up and Customizing Impress. Many of the toolbars in Impress are similar to the toolbars in Draw. Refer to the Draw Guide for details on the functions available and how to use them.
Status bar
The status bar, located at the bottom of the Impress window, contains information that you may find useful when working on a presentation. You can hide the Status Bar by choosing View > Status Bar from the main menu.
Note
The sizes are given in the current measurement unit (not to be confused with the ruler units). This unit is defined in Tools > Options > LibreOffice Impress > General.
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Cursor position: the position of the cursor or of the top left corner of the selection measured
from the top left corner of the slide, followed by the width and height of the selection or text box where the cursor is located.
Unsaved changes: an icon indicating that the file needs saving. Double-clicking on this icon
opens the Save or Save As dialog.
Digital signature: an icon indicating whether the document is digitally signed. After the file
has been saved, double-clicking on this icon opens the digital signatures dialog.
Slide number: the slide number currently displayed in the Workspace and the total number
of slides in the presentation.
Page (slide) style: the style associated with the slide, handout, or notes page currently in
the Workspace. Double-clicking on the style name opens the slide design dialog.
Zoom slider: adjusts the zoom percentage of the Workspace displayed. Zoom percentage: indicates the zoom percentage of the Workspace displayed. Doubleclicking on zoom percentage opens the zoom and layout dialog.
Navigator
The Navigator displays all objects contained in a document. It provides another convenient way to move around a document and find items in it. To display the Navigator, click its icon on the Standard toolbar, or choose View > Navigator on the menu bar, or press Ctrl+Shift+F5. The Navigator is more useful if you give your slides and objects (pictures, spreadsheets, and so on) meaningful names, instead of leaving them as the default Slide 1 and Shape 1.
Figure 5: Navigator
Workspace views
Each of the Workspace views is designed to ease the completion of certain tasks; it is therefore useful to familiarize yourself with them to quickly accomplish those tasks.
Note
Each Workspace view displays a different set of toolbars when selected. These toolbar sets can be customized by going to View > Toolbars, then check or uncheck the toolbar you want to add or remove.
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Normal view
Normal view is the main view for creating individual slides. Use this view to format and design slides and to add text, graphics, and animation effects. To place a slide in the slide design area of the Normal view (Figure 3), either click the slide thumbnail in the Slides pane or double-click it in the Navigator (page 18).
Outline view
Outline view contains all of the slides of the presentation in their numbered sequence. It shows topic titles, bulleted lists, and numbered lists for each slide in outline format. Only the text contained in the default text boxes in each slide is shown. If you have added text boxes or graphic objects to the slides, then these objects are not displayed. Slide names are not included.
Figure 6: Outline view Use Outline view for: 1) Making changes in the text of a slide:
Add or delete text in a slide just as in the Normal view. Move the paragraphs of text in the selected slide up or down by using the up and down
arrow buttons (Move Up or Move Down) on the Text Formatting toolbar.
Change the outline level for any of the paragraphs in a slide using the left and right
arrow buttons (Promote or Demote) on the Text Formatting toolbar (Figure 6).
Simultaneously move a paragraph and change its outline level using a combination of
these four arrow buttons. 2) Comparing the slides with your outline (if you have prepared one in advance). If you notice from your outline that another slide is needed, you can create it directly in the Outline view, or you can return to the Normal view to create it.
Notes view
Use the Notes view (Figure 8) to add notes to a slide. These notes are not seen when the presentation is shown. 1) Click the Notes tab in the Workspace. 2) Select the slide to which you want to add notes.
Chapter 1 Introducing Impress 19
Click the slide in the Slide pane, or Double-click the slide name in the Navigator.
3) In the text box below the slide, click on the words Click to add notes and begin typing. You can resize the Notes text box using the green resizing handles and move it by placing the pointer on the border, then clicking and dragging. To make changes in the text style, press the F11 key to open the Styles and Formatting window.
Handout view
Handout view is for setting up the layout of your slide for a printed handout. Click the Handout tab in the workspace, then choose Layouts in the tasks pane. You can then choose to print 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, or 9 slides per page.
Figure 9: Handout layouts Use this view also to customize the information printed on the handout. Refer to Chapter 8 Adding and Formatting Slides, Notes, and Handouts for more information. Select from the main menu Insert > Page Number or Insert > Date and Time and the Header and Footer dialog opens. Click on the Notes and Handouts tab (Figure 10) and use this dialog to select the elements you want to appear on each handout page and their contents.
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Figure 10: Dialog to set the page information for handouts and notes
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Use the Control (Ctrl) key: Click on the first slide and, while pressing the Control key, select
the other desired slides.
Use the Shift key: Click on the first slide, and while pressing the Shift key, select the final
slide in the group. This selects all of the other slides between the first and the last.
Use the mouse: Click slightly to one side (left or right) of the first slide to be selected. Hold
down the left mouse button and drag the mouse pointer until all of the slides you want to select are highlighted. To move a group of slides: 1) Select a group of slides. 2) Drag and drop the group to their new location.
New Slide: add a new slide after the selected slide. Delete Slide: delete the selected slide. Rename Slide: rename the selected slide. Slide Layout: change the layout of the selected slide. Slide Transition: change the transition of the selected slide.
For one slide, click the slide to select it and then add the desired transition. For more than one slide, select the group of slides and add the desired transition.
Hide Slide: hidden slides are not shown in the slide show. Cut: remove the selected slide and save it to the clipboard. Copy: copy the selected slide to the clipboard without removing it. Paste: insert a slide from the clipboard. You can also specify whether you want to paste the copied slide before or after the selected slide.
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Tip
Figure 13. Choosing the type of presentation 1) Under Type, choose one of the options:
Empty presentation creates a blank presentation. From template uses a template design already created as the basis for a new
presentation. The wizard changes to show a list of available templates. Choose the template you want. More details can be found in Chapter 2, Using Slide Masters, Styles, and Templates.
The types of Presentation Backgrounds are shown in Figure 14. Click an item to show a preview of the slide design in the Preview window. Impress contains three choices under Presentations: <Original>, Introducing a New Product, and Recommendation of a Strategy. <Original> is for a blank presentation slide design.
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Both Introducing a New Product and Recommendation of a Strategy have their own prepackaged slide designs. Each design appears in the Preview window when its name is clicked.
Introducing a New Product and Recommendation of a Strategy are included presentation templates. They can be used to create a presentation by choosing From template in the first step (Figure 13).
Note
3) Select how the presentation will be used under Select an output medium. Most often, presentations are created for computer screen display, so you would select Screen. You can change the page format at any time.
Note
The default Screen page is optimized for a 4:3 display (28cm x 21cm) so it is not suitable for modern wide-screen displays. You can change the slide size at any time switching to Normal view and selecting Format > Page.
4) Click Next. The Presentation Wizard step 3 appears (Figure 14). Select the desired speed for the transition between the different slides in the presentation from the Speed drop-down menu. Medium is a good choice for now. 5) Click Create. A new presentation is created.
You can accept the default values for both Effect and Speed unless you are skilled at creating presentations. Both of these values can be changed later while working with Slide transitions and animations. These two features are explained in more detail in Chapter 9. Slide Shows.
Choose the desired slide transition from the Effect drop-down menu.
Tip
Note
If you selected From template on step 1 of the Wizard, the Next button will be active on step 3 and other pages will be available. These pages are not described here.
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Caution
Formatting a presentation
A new presentation only contains one empty slide. In this section we will start adding new slides and preparing them for the intended contents.
Inserting slides
This can be done in a variety of ways; take your pick.
Insert > Slide. Right-click on the present slide, and select Slide > New Slide from the pop-up menu.
in the Presentation toolbar. Sometimes, rather than starting from a new slide you want to duplicate a slide you have already inserted. To duplicate a slide, select the slide you want from the Slides pane and then choose Insert > Duplicate Slide.
Selecting a layout
In the Tasks pane, select the Layout drawer to display the available layouts (Figure 16). The Layouts differ in the number of elements a slide will contain, from a blank slide to a slide with six contents boxes and a title.
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Figure 16: Available slide layouts The first slide in a presentation is normally a title slide. The Title Slide (which also contains a section for a subtitle) or Title Only are suitable layouts for the first slide, while for most of the slides you will probably use the Title, Contents layout. To create the title, click on Click to add title (assuming the Blank Slide layout was not used) and then type the title text. To adjust the formatting of the title, modify the Title presentation style; see Chapter 2, Using Slide Masters, Styles, and Templates for instructions. If you are using the Title Slide layout, click on Click to add text to add a subtitle. Proceed as above to make adjustments to the formatting if required, modifying the Subtitle presentation style.
Text and graphic elements can be readjusted at any time during the preparation of the presentation, but changing the layout of a slide that already contains some contents can have a dramatic effect. It is therefore recommended that you pay particular attention to the layout you select. If you do need to change the layout after contents have been added, the contents are not lost though they may need to be reformatted.
Note
To view the names for the included layouts, use the Tooltip feature: position the cursor on an icon in the Layout section (or on any toolbar icon) and its name will be displayed in a small rectangle.
Tip
If tooltips are not enabled, choose Tools > Options > LibreOffice > General > Help and select the Tips option. If the Extended tips option is also selected, you will get more detailed tooltip information, but the tooltip names themselves will not be provided.
To select or change the layout, place the slide in the work area and select the desired layout from the layout drawer in the Task Pane. Several layouts contain one or more content boxes. Each of these boxes can be configured to contain one of the following elements: Text, Movie, Picture, Chart or Table. You can choose the type of contents by clicking on the icon that is displayed in the middle of the contents box as shown in Figure 17. If instead you intend to use the contents box for text, just click on the Click to add text area to get a cursor.
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Figure 17: Selecting contents type To select or change the layout, place the slide in the work area and select the desired layout from the layout drawer in the Task Pane. If you have selected a layout with one or more contents boxes, this is a good time to decide what type of contents you want to insert.
Caution
Changes to any of the layouts included in Impress can only be made using View > Normal, which is the default. Attempting any changes by modifying a slide master, although possible, may result in unpredictable results and requires extra care as well as a certain amount of trial and error.
buttons on the Text Formatting toolbar (see Outline view on page 19). For more information on text, see Chapter 3, Adding and Formatting Text.
For pictures, see Chapter 4, Adding and Formatting Pictures. For graphic objects, see Chapter 5, Managing Graphic Objects and Chapter 6, Formatting
Graphic Objects.
For OLE and other objects, see Chapter 7, Including Spreadsheets, Charts, and Other
Objects.
Note
Impress has included a range of slide masters, found in the Master Pages section of the Tasks pane. You can also create and save additional slide masters or add more from other sources. See Chapter 2, Using Slide Masters, Styles, and Templates for information on creating and modifying slide masters. If all you need to do is to change the background, you can take a shortcut: 1) Select Format > Page and go to the Background tab. 2) Select the desired background between solid color, gradient, hatching, and bitmap. Click OK to apply it. A dialog box opens, asking if the background should be applied to all the slides. If you click Yes, Impress automatically modifies the master page for you.
3) Would an additional slide make a particular point clearer? If so, another slide needs to be created. 4) Do some of the slides seem unnecessary? Hide or delete them. 5) Would custom animations help some of the slides? (Advanced technique.) 6) Should some of the slides have a different slide transition than others? The transition of those slides should be changed.
Caution
If one or more slides seem to be unnecessary, hide the slide or slides, and view the slide show a few more times to make sure they are not needed. To hide a slide, right-click the slide in the Slides pane and select Hide Slide in the pop-up menu. Do not delete a slide until you have done this; otherwise you may have to create that slide again.
Once you have answered these and your own questions, make the necessary changes. This is done most easily in the Slide Sorter view (see page 21). Use the Slide Show menu to change the order of the slides, choose which ones are shown, automate moving from one slide to the next, and other settings. To change the slide transition, animate slides, and make other enhancements, use the various selections in the Task pane.
Custom animations
If you wish to add a custom animation to a slide, do it now. Custom animations are found in the Custom Animation section of the Tasks pane. This is an advanced technique and is explained in Chapter 9, Slide Shows.
Slide transitions
Your first slide show will probably have the same slide transition for all slides. Setting Advance slide to On mouse click is the default. If you want each slide to be shown for a specific amount of time, click Automatically after and enter the number of seconds. Click Apply to all slides. Transition choices are found under Slide Transition on the Tasks pane. For more information about slide transitions, see Chapter 9, Slide Shows.
The Slide transition section has a very useful option: Automatic preview. With this option selected, when you make any changes in a slide transition, the new slide is previewed in the Slide Design area, including its transition effect.
Tip
Click Slide Show > Slide Show on the main menu bar. Click the Slide Show button on the Presentation toolbar or the Slide Sorter toolbar. Press F5 or F9. (F9 does not work on a Mac.)
If the slide transition is Automatically after x seconds, let the slide show run by itself. If the slide transition is On mouse click, do one of the following to move from one slide to the next.
Click the mouse button to advance to the next slide. Use the arrow keys on the keyboard to go to the next slide or to go back to the previous
one.
Right-click anywhere on the screen to open a menu from which you can navigate the slides and set other options. When you advance past the last slide, the message Click to exit presentation... appears. Click the mouse or press any key to exit the presentation. To exit the slide show at any time including at the end, press the Esc key.
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Designing a presentation
In addition to careful planning of the content (as discussed in Chapter 1 Introducing Impress), you need to plan the appearance of the presentation. It is best to do this after you have developed an outline, because the outline will determine some of the requirements for the appearance of the slides. For example:
What color combinations (background and text) will look good and also be easy for your
audience to read?
Would a picture help your audience understand the contents better? Do you want particular text and a picture to appear on all the slides? (for example a
company name and logo.)
Would the audience benefit from having the slides numbered so that they can quickly refer
to one of them?
Do you want a background graphic or gradient? If so, you need to pick something that does
not interfere or clash with content such as the colors used in charts.
Will you need one slide master or more than one? Will one slide design suit all of the
content? You can change the appearance of slides as you develop the presentation, but planning ahead will save you time in the long run.
Note
A slide master has a defined set of characteristics, including the background color, graphic, or gradient; objects (such as logos, decorative lines, and other graphics) in the background; headers and footers; placement and size of text frames; and the formatting of text. All of the characteristics of slide masters are controlled by styles. The styles of any new slide you create are inherited from the slide master from which it was created. In other words, the styles of the slide master are available and applied to all slides created from that slide master. Changing a style in a slide master results in changes to all the slides based on that slide master. It is, however, possible to modify each individual slide without affecting the slide master.
Although it is highly recommended to use the slide masters whenever possible, there are occasions where manual changes are needed for a particular slide, for example to enlarge the chart area when the text and chart layout is used.
Note
Slide masters have two types of styles associated with them: presentation styles and graphic styles. Both these style types can be modified. New graphic styles can be created but new presentation styles cannot.. Presentation styles are discussed in detail in Chapter 3, Working with Text. The use of graphic styles is covered in Chapter 6, Formatting Graphic Objects. See also Working with styles in Impress on page 43.
32 LibreOffice 3.5 Impress Guide
Figure 18: Available master pages (slide masters) Each of the slide masters shown in the Available for Use list is from a template of the same name. If you have created your own templates, or added templates from other sources, slide masters from those templates will also appear in this list. See Working with templates on page 43 for more about templates.
Figure 19: Master View toolbar A second slide master appears in the Slides pane. Modify this slide master to suit your requirements. It is recommended that you rename this new slide master. To do that, right-click on the slide in the Slides pane and select Rename master from the pop-up menu. When you are done, close the Master View toolbar to return to normal slide editing mode.
Chapter 2 Using Slide Masters, Styles, and Templates 33
Figure 20: Slide Design The main area in the dialog shows the slide masters already available for use. To add more: 1) Click the Load button. 2) Select in the Load Slide Design dialog (Figure 21) the template from which to load the slide master and click OK. 3) Click OK again to close the slide design dialog. The slide masters in the template you selected are now shown in the Available for use subsection in the Master Pages section of the Tasks pane.
34
Note
Tip
Background (color, gradient, hatching, or bitmap) Background objects (for example, adding a logo or decorative graphics) Text attributes for the main text area and notes Size, placement, and contents of header and footer elements to appear on every slide Size and placement of default frames for slide titles and content
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To select the slide master for modification: 1) Select View > Master > Slide Master from the menu bar. This unlocks the properties of the slide master so you can edit it. 2) Click Master Pages in the Tasks pane. This gives you access to the slide masters. 3) Click on the slide master you want to modify (Figure 18). 4) Make changes as described in this chapter, then click the Close Master View icon on the Master View toolbar. Save the file before continuing.
Caution
Any changes made to one slide when in Master View mode will appear on all slides using this slide master. Always make sure you close Master View and return to Normal view before working on any of the presentation slides. Select View > Normal from the menu bar, or clicking Close Master View in the Master View toolbar to return to the normal slide view.
The changes made to one of the slides in Normal view (for example, changes to the bullet point style, the color of the title area, and so on) will not be overridden by subsequent changes to the slide master. There are cases, however, where it is desirable to revert a manually modified element of the slide to the style defined in the slide master: to do that, select that element and choose Format > Default Formatting from the menu bar. It is also possible to modify the default layout of the slide master, for example by moving the title to the side; however, you are restricted to modifications to the Title, Text layout (that is, the layout containing a title box and a text box). Sometimes, depending on the contents of the slide, you may want to apply a different layout. The title and text boxes will inherit the properties of the slide master, but if you have changed the position of these text boxes in the slide master, the layout may appear corrupted and you may need to re-position some of the layout elements manually.
Select Format > Page from the menu bar. On the Page Setup dialog, choose the
Background tab (Figure 24). OR
Select Format > Styles and Formatting from the menu bar (or press F11) and make
sure the Presentation Styles icon is selected (Figure 23), then right-click Background and select Modify from the pop-up menu. This opens the Background dialog, which has one tab (Area) that is the same as the Background tab in the Page Setup dialog. 2) Select the type of fill you want for your background from the five choices in the drop-down menu (Figure 24): None, Color, Gradient, Hatching, or Bitmap. 3) A list of choices for the selected fill type then appears. Figure 25 shows an example of background colors. 4) Select one of the items on the Fill list and click OK. The fill you have chosen is added to the slide master, replacing any previously selected fill.
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37
Tip
You can make custom additions to each type of background, with the obvious exception of None. After you create new fills, they are listed in the Background dialog along with the fills provided with LibreOffice (see Chapter 6 for more information).
Caution
Once the picture is inserted, you need to move it to the background. To do that, while the picture is still selected, right click on the picture and select Arrange > Send to Back from the context menu. You may also need to reposition it and modify its size. To do that see Chapter 4, Adding and Formatting Pictures.
If you want the image to blend with the background, you can set the background color of the picture as transparent. Select the picture, then chose Tools > Color Replacer from the menu bar. Select the first checkbox and then move the mouse cursor onto the picture and click on the color you want to make transparent. This color appears next to the checkbox. Make sure that Replace with... is set to Transparent and click Replace.
Tip
Tip
An easy way to make the picture lighter so that the text stands out better against its background, is to increase the transparency of the picture or change the gamma. Both these adjustments can be quickly made from the Picture toolbar.
In addition to pictures you can add a number of other background objects, for example decorative lines, text and shapes. Figure 22 is an example of a slide master with a custom background gradient, a background picture, another picture in the top right corner, some decorative lines and some customized presentation styles.
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Presentation styles
Presentation styles (Figure 23) affect three elements of a slide master: the background, background objects (such as icons, decorative lines, and text frames), and the text placed on the slide. Text styles are further divided into Notes, Outline 1 through Outline 9, Subtitle, and Title. The outline styles are used for the different levels of the outline to which they belong. For example, Outline 2 is used for the sub-points of Outline 1, and Outline 3 is used for the sub-points of Outline 2. The presentation styles can be modified, but new presentation styles cannot be created.
Graphics styles
Graphics styles (Figure 26) apply to lines, shapes and text boxes created using the Impress drawing tools and define the formatting of such objects. You can create additional styles or modify the included styles. To work on the slide master styles, start by opening the Styles and Formatting window shown in Figure 23 for Presentation styles and Figure 26 for Graphic styles. Either press F11 or select Format > Styles and Formatting from the main menu.
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Note
The presence of text and title styles both in the Presentation and Graphics styles may seem confusing. This apparent duplication is because Impress uses special text boxes when adding structured text to slides where Presentation styles apply (AutoLayout boxes). The title and other text styles in Graphics styles continue to apply to other text boxes you may want to add, or to text associated with shapes or lines.
Tip
At the bottom of the Styles and Formatting window is a drop-down list. You can choose to show all styles or other groups of styles, for example applied styles or (for Graphics styles only) custom styles.
You can dock or undock the Styles and Formatting dialog by holding down the Control key while double-clicking on the icon toolbar. Press F11 to close the Styles and Formatting window when you do not need it. LibreOffice will remember its position the next time you re-open the Styles and Formatting dialog.
Title area for AutoLayouts Object area for AutoLayouts Date area Footer area Slide number area
Click with the left mouse button on any of these areas to display eight colored selection handles around the rectangle. Use these handles to modify the size and position of the area. 1) To change the position, move the mouse towards one of the edges, away from the handles, until the cursor changes shape1, then click the left mouse button and drag the area to the desired position. 2) To modify the shape and size of one of the rectangular areas, use one of the eight handles. The corner handles modify the height and width of the rectangle simultaneously while the side handles modify only one dimension at a time. The shape of the mouse cursor usually changes shape when over a handle, giving a clear visual indication of how it will affect the shape of the rectangular area.
To keep the shape of the rectangular area constant, move the mouse to one of the four corner handles and keep the Shift key pressed while dragging the handle with the mouse.
Tip
To accurately control the shape and size as well as the position of the default text area, it is better to use the Position and Size dialog than the mouse. First select the rectangular area by clicking on any point inside it, then press F4 or choose Format > Position and Size. The dialog shown in Figure 28 is displayed. The functions of this dialog are explained in the Draw Guide, so only a short description of the most important fields is provided in this chapter. Use the Position section to specify the X (horizontal) and Y (vertical) position of the rectangular area. The values represent the distance of the selected base point and the default position is the top left corner of the slide.
The shape of the cursor to move and resize objects is operating system specific.
41
Use the Size section to specify the width and height of the rectangular area. In the Base point section, select the part of the rectangular area that you do not want to move while resizing. The default setting of top left corner means that the position of the top left corner of the area will not change after resizing. You can also use the Rotation tab of the dialog to rotate the default text area. For example, you can place the footer area on the side by rotating each text area by 90 degrees and obtain a more modern-looking layout. In general it is preferable to use only right angles for ease of editing, although the program does not impose restrictions on the values that can be used.
Figure 29: Alignment and Arrange icons on the Drawing toolbar The date area and slide number area do not automatically appear on every slide, even though you have defined them. To show them, you need to close the Master View and select the desired field from the main menu: Insert > Page number or Insert > Date and time. This procedure is explained in detail in Chapter 8, Adding and Formatting Slides, Notes, and Handouts.
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Date (fixed) Date (variable): updates automatically when you reload the file Time (fixed) Time (variable): updates automatically when you reload the file Author: first and last names listed in the LibreOffice user data Page number (slide number) File name
LibreOffice 3.5 Impress Guide
Tip
To change the number format (1,2,3 or a,b,c or i,ii,iii, etc.) for the page number field, choose Format > Page and then select a format from the list in the Layout Settings area. To change the author information, go to Tools > Options > LibreOffice > User Data.
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Tip
Tip
Figure 30. Saving a new template 3) In the New template field, type a name for the new template. 4) In the Categories list, click the folder in which you want to store the template. This is usually the My Templates folder, unless you have created other folders. To learn more about template folders, see Organizing templates on page 47. 5) Click OK. LibreOffice saves the new template and the Templates dialog closes.
Note
All the slide masters used in the template become available for use in other presentations.
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Modifying a template
You can edit the styles and content of a template and then, if you wish, you can reapply the template styles to presentations that were created from that template.
Note
To edit a template: 1) From the main menu, choose File > Templates > Edit. A standard file browser window opens. 2) Find and select the template that you want to edit and then click Open. The selected template opens in Impress. 3) Edit the template just as you would any other presentation. To save your changes, choose File > Save from the main menu.
Figure 32. Update styles message Click Update Styles to update any styles in the template that have been changed in the document. Click Keep Old Styles if you do not want to update any styles in the template that have been changed in the document. Whichever option you choose, the message box closes and the presentation opens in Impress.
46 LibreOffice 3.5 Impress Guide
Organizing templates
LibreOffice can only use templates that are in LibreOffice template folders. You can create new LibreOffice template folders and use them to organize your templates. For example, you might have separate template folders for different purposes or projects. You can also import and export templates. To begin, choose File > Templates > Organize from the main menu. The Template Management dialog (Figure 31) opens.
Note
All the actions available from the Commands button in the Template Management dialog can also be carried out by right-clicking on the templates or the folders.
Tip
The location of LibreOffice template folders varies with your computers operating system. To learn where the template folders are stored on your computer, go to Tools > Options > LibreOffice > Paths.
Moving a template
To move a template from one template folder to another template folder: 1) In the Template Management dialog (Figure 31), double-click the folder that contains the template you want to move. A list of all the templates contained in that folder appears underneath the folder name. 2) Click the template that you want to move and drag it to the desired folder. If you do not have the authority to delete templates from the source folder, this action copies the template instead of moving it.
Deleting a template
You cannot delete the templates supplied with LibreOffice or installed using the Extension Manager. You can only delete templates that you have created or imported. To delete a template: 1) In the Template Management dialog (Figure 31), open the folder that contains the template you want to delete by double-clicking on it. Then click the template that you want to delete.
Chapter 2 Using Slide Masters, Styles, and Templates 47
2) Click the Commands button and choose Delete from the drop-down menu. A dialog appears and asks you to confirm the deletion. Click Yes.
Importing a template
Before you can use a template, you must import it into a LibreOffice template folder. To import a template into a template folder from another location on your computer: 1) In the Template Management dialog (Figure 31), click the folder into which you want to import the template. 2) Click the Commands button and choose Import Template from the drop-down menu. A standard file browser window opens. 3) Find and select the template that you want to import and click Open. The file browser window closes and the template appears in the selected template folder. 4) If you want, type a new name for the template, and then press Enter.
Exporting a template
To export a template from a template folder to another location: 1) In the Template Management dialog (Figure 31), double-click the folder that contains the template you want to export. 2) Click the template that you want to export. 3) Click the Commands button and choose Export Template. from the drop-down menu. The Save As window opens. 4) Find the folder into which you want to export the template and click Save.
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Introduction
Any text used in slides is contained in text boxes. This chapter describes how to create, modify, use, and delete text boxes. It also discusses the various types of text that can be inserted and explains how to format the text. Finally, it provides information on how to insert special forms of text such as numbered or bulleted lists, tables, fields, and hyperlinks.
Choose a predefined layout from the Layouts section of the Tasks pane, containing text
elements as described in Chapter 1. These text boxes are called AutoLayout text boxes.
Figure 33: Drawing Toolbar 2) Click and drag to draw a text box on the slide. This sets the width. Do not worry about the height because the text box will expand as you type. 3) To reposition the text box to a different part of the slide, see Moving a text box on page 52; to change the width, see Resizing a text box on page 52. 4) Release the mouse button when finished. The cursor appears in the text box, which is now in edit mode (a hashed border; see Figure 34). 5) Type or paste your text in the text box. 6) Click outside the text box to deselect it.
In addition to the normal text boxes where text is horizontally aligned, it is possible to
Note
insert text boxes where the text is aligned vertically. Click on the icon in the drawing toolbar (Figure 33) to create a vertical text box. This choice is available only when Asian languages are enabled in Tools > Options > Language Settings > Languages.
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Note
If you want to use vertical text text, click on the icon in the text toolbar (Figure 35) to create a vertical text box. This choice is available only when Asian languages are enabled in Tools > Options > Language Settings > Languages.
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Tip
For more accurate control over the shape, size and position of the text box, instead of using the mouse, use the Position and Size dialog. Select the text box, then press F4 or select Format > Position and Size from the menu bar. The use of this dialog is explained in Chapter 2 Using Slide Masters, Styles, and Templates.
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Tip
Sometimes it is faster to to delete a text box by dragging a selection rectangle around the text box and then hitting the Delete key. Take care to avoid selecting and accidentally deleting other text boxes or shapes.
Inserting text
Pasting text
Text may be inserted into the text box by copying it from another document and pasting it into Impress. However, the pasted text will probably not match the formatting of the surrounding text or that of the other slides in the presentation. This may be what you want on some occasions; however in most cases you want to make sure that the presentation style is consistent. There are several ways to ensure consistency; these methods are explained below.
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Figure 38: Text formatting toolbar 1) Paste the text in the desired position. Do not worry if it does not look right: it will in a minute. 2) Select the text you have just pasted (see Selecting text on page 56 for details on how to do that). 3) Select Format > Default formatting from the menu bar. This operation will assign one of the nine Presentation styles to the text (depending on where the insertion is made). 4) Use the four arrows on the Text Formatting toolbar (highlighted in Figure 38) to move the text to the appropriate position and give it the appropriate outline level. The left arrow promotes the list entry by one level (for example from Outline 3 to Outline 2), the right arrow demotes the list entry by one level, the up and down arrows move the list entry. 5) Apply manual formatting as required to sections of the text (to change font attributes, tabs, and so on). If you are pasting text into a text box, you can still use styles to quickly format the text. Note that only one graphic style can be applied to the copied text. To do this: 1) Paste the text in the desired position. 2) Select the text you have just pasted (see Selecting text on page 56 for details). 3) Select the desired graphic style. 4) Apply manual formatting as required to sections of the text.
Tip
Presentation styles are very different from Writer styles and are applied in quite a different way. Refer to Using styles to format text on page 56 for details.
Tip
3) Choose the font and character subset from the Font and Subset drop-down menus. 4) Click the character you want to insert. You may have to scroll to find the one you want. 5) Click OK. Characters you select will be inserted in the order they were selected, even if you accidentally click on the wrong character. Clicking on another character will only add it to the ones being inserted. Click Delete and all the characters selected will be deleted, then click on the correct characters. Alternatively, you can also insert all the selected characters and delete any unwanted ones from the document because special characters behave like any other character.
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Non-breaking space: a non-breaking space between two words prevents these two words
being separated over two lines. The keyboard shortcut is Control+Shift+Spacebar to insert a non-breaking space.
Non-breaking hyphen: a non-breaking hyphen keeps the two words separated by the
hyphen on the same line.
Optional hyphen: an optional hyphen is only activated (thus breaking the word) when the
word is too long to fit on one line.
Tip
Character attributes (for example font color) Paragraph attributes (for example alignment) List attributes (for example type of bullet)
Chapter 3 Adding and Formatting Text 55
In some cases it is quicker and more efficient to apply manual formatting; but in situations where you need to perform the same modifications to many different parts of the presentation, the use of styles is recommended. Both these techniques are described here.
Unlike LibreOffice Writer, where it is recommended to use styles whenever possible, in Impress manual formatting has to be used more often. This is because presentation styles are fixed in Impress; therefore it is not possible, for example, to have two different level 1s or different types of bullet points for the same outline level. Also, the lack of support for character styles forces the use of manual formatting to modify sections of the text.
Note
Selecting text
Text must be selected before it can be formatted.
To format all the text in a text box, click once on the text, then click once on the border of
the text box. The colored resizing handles are displayed. Now any formatting changes will apply to all the text in the text box.
To format only part of the text, click once on the text, then select the text to be formatted by
clicking and dragging over it (highlighting). You can also use keyboard combinations to select text: move the cursor where you want to begin your selection, press Shift and then use the arrow keys to extend your selection. Formatting changes will apply only to the selected text.
To select text word by word, instead of by character, press the Control key and Shift key together. To speed up the selection even further, you can combine the Shift key with the Home key or the End key to extend the selection up to the start or end of the line in which the cursor is positioned, respectively.
Tip
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Figure 41: Dialog for modifying a presentation style This modifying dialog consists of fifteen tabbed pages, which can be divided in two groups: pages that determine formatting of the text, and pages that determine the properties of slide master background and background objects. There is no difference between attributes that determine a style and attributes used manually on portions of text. In fact the pages that open when manually applying formatting are the same that you use when configuring styles in the styles and formatting dialog. Therefore, once you master the formatting of text, you will know how to create and modify a style. In particular:
For the Font and Font Effects style pages, refer to Formatting characters on page 58. For the Indents and Spacing, Alignment, and Tabs style pages, refer to Formatting
paragraphs on page 60.
For the Bullet and numbering type, Graphics, Customize style pages, refer to Creating
bulleted and numbered lists on page 63. Some of the pages in the modifying dialog relate to formatting presentation styles and some pages relate to formatting the background and background objects, which are described in detail in Chapter 6 Formatting Graphic Objects.
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Formatting characters
To view the character formatting options, select Format > Character or click the Character icon on the Text Formatting toolbar (Figure 38) and the Character dialog opens (Figure 42). If Text Formatting toolbar is not visible, choose View > Toolbars > Text Formatting. Note that character styles do not exist in Impress.
Font page
Use the Font page to select the desired font type, its base attributes (Italic, Bold, etc.) as well as the size. A sample of the font is displayed in the lower part of the dialog. You can also specify the language of this style. This font page is also available when creating or modifying a presentation style or a graphics style.
Tip
If support for Asian language and Complex Text Layout (CTL) font has been enabled (Tools > Options > Language Settings > Languages), the Font page changes to look like Figure 43. The page is divided into three parts for Western text font, Asian text font and CTL text font. Each part has the same functionality as the Character dialog shown in Figure 42, whilst allowing you to specify the Asian and CTL text fonts and their attributes.
58
Position page
The Position page (Figure 45) has advanced options to customize text. Use this page to set the text position relative to the baseline when you need to insert subscripts or superscripts. This page is not available when creating or modifying a presentation style or a graphics style. To create a superscript or a subscript do the following: 1) Select Superscript or Subscript as applicable. 2) Specify the amount by which the text should be raised (superscripts) or lowered (subscripts). 3) Specify the dimensions of the character relative to the baseline character size (in percentage).
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Figure 45: Character Position in Character dialog The amount by which the text is raised or lowered can be set to automatic by selecting Automatic. Two more position attributes can be set on this page:
The (width) scaling of the text, which specifies the percentage of the font width by which to
compress or expand the individual characters of the selected text.
The spacing between the characters of the font, which can be defined in number of points.
Selecting Pair kerning causes LibreOffice to automatically adjust the spacing between certain pairs of characters to visually improve the appearance. For example, when writing a V followed by an A (VA) the spacing between the two letters is reduced (strong kerning) as can be easily seen when compared with, say, VS which is not a kerning pair.
Formatting paragraphs
To view the paragraph formatting options, select Format > Paragraph or click the Paragraph icon on the Text Formatting toolbar (Figure 38) and the Paragraph dialog opens (Figure 46). If this toolbar is not visible, choose View > Toolbars > Text Formatting. Normally the paragraph formatting dialog contains three pages: Indents and Spacing; Alignment and Tabs. However, if Asian language support has been enabled in Tools> Options > Language Settings > Languages, a page called Asian Typography is also displayed.
Indent: modifies the indentation of the text (before and after) as well as the indentation of
the first line.
Spacing: defines the space before and after each paragraph formatted with the style. Line spacing: determines the spacing between two lines formatted with the style. Note that
selecting Proportional spacing requires specifying the percentage of a line to be used as spacing; 100% corresponds to a single line, 200% to a double line, 50% to half a line. If Leading is selected, specify the amount of line spacing in your default unit of measurement.
60 LibreOffice 3.5 Impress Guide
Preview area: provides a visual representation of the settings before you apply them. Tip
Setting the line spacing to less than 100% is a good method to cram a lot of text into a text box, however care must be taken as too small a value will make the text hard to read. You can change the default unit of measurement, for example from inches to centimeters, from Tools > Options > LibreOffice Impress > General.
Tip
Alignment page
Click on the Alignment tab to display the Alignment page (Figure 47). Use this page to determine the paragraph alignment: Left, Right, Center, or Justified. A preview shows the effects of the changes. This page is also available in Presentation Styles dialog and Graphics Styles dialog.
Note
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The same alignment options can be accessed using the alignment icons Text Formatting toolbar (Figure 38).
on the
Tabs page
Click on the Tabs tab to display the Tabs page (Figure 48). Use this page to determine the tab stops. This page is also available in Presentation Styles dialog and Graphics Styles dialog. To delete an existing tab stop, select it in the list and click the Delete button. To delete all the tab stops, click the Delete All button.
Figure 48: Tabs in Paragraph formatting dialog To create a new tab stop: 1) Set the size of the tab stop in the edit box on the left. 2) Select the type. If you set the type to Decimal, specify in the box below the character to be regarded as the decimal point. 3) Select a fill character which will be drawn from the tab insertion point up to the tab stop. You can choose any character to act as fill character. 4) Click the New button to apply the new tab stop.
Apply list of forbidden characters to the beginning and end of lines. Allow hanging punctuation. Apply spacing between Asian, Latin and Complex text.
Tip
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Caution
Do not try to change the outline level by selecting the text and then clicking the desired outline style as you would in Writer. Due to the way that presentation styles work in Impress it is not possible to apply them in this way.
If a bulleted list is needed, select the desired bullet style from the six default styles
available on the Bullets page.
If a graphics style is needed, select one from those available on the Graphics page. If a numbered list is needed, select one of the six default numbering styles on the
Numbering type page.
Figure 50: Bullets and Numbering dialog Later in this section is an explanation on how to add further bullets and numbering styles to the existing ones.
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For a single line in the list, click anywhere in the line to place the cursor in it and follow steps 2 and 3 above. If the list was created in an AutoLayout text box, then an alternative way to change the entire list is to modify the Outline styles. Changes made to the outline style will apply to all the slides using them, so be careful before using this command. The pages related to list management are described below.
Position page
Use the Position page (Figure 51) to adjust the indentation and spacing of the bullet point and its text. This page is particularly effective when used in combination with the Customize page. To set up an outline level, first select it from the list on the left hand side of the page. Select level 1 10 to modify all levels simultaneously. Then set the Indent, which is the spacing between the bullet or number and the text. If you select the Relative option, the indent value will be measured relative to the previous level and not from the margin.
Figure 51: Bullets and Numbering Position page The numbering alignment is only useful when creating a numbered list; use it to specify the alignment of numbers. For example, you may want to align them to the right to line up one and two-digit numbers.
To fully appreciate how the Numbering alignment works, try to create a numbered list with more than ten elements and make sure that enough room has been made for a two (or more) digit number using the Width of numbering field.
Tip
The Position page is not available if you are modifying a presentation style or graphics style, however the same effects can be obtained by using the Indents and Spacing page of the Paragraph dialog (Figure 46 on page 61) for creating or modifying a slide.
Customize page
Use the Customize page (Figure 52) to alter the style of all the outline levels.
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Figure 52: Bullets and Numbering Customize page The options available on this page depend on the type of marker selected for the list. Select first the level you want to modify on the left hand side of the box. To modify all levels at once, select 1 10 as the level. With these levels being arranged in a hierarchical structure, changing, for example, the font attribute of one of the levels ripples through all the lower levels. Depending on the bullet style selected (bullet, numbering; graphic), some of the following options may become available on the Customize page:
Before: enter any text to appear before the number (for example, Step). After: enter any text to appear after the number (for example, a punctuation mark). Color: pick the color for the list marker (number or bullet character).
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Relative size: specify the size of the number relative to the size of the characters in the
paragraph of the list.
Start at: enter the first value of the list (for example, you might want the list to start at 4
instead of 1).
Character button: click this button to select the special character for the bullet. Graphics: opens a gallery of available graphics or allows the selection of a file on the hard
disk to be used as a marker.
Width and Height: specify the dimensions of the graphic marker. Keep ratio checkbox: if selected, the ratio between the width and the height of the graphic
marker is fixed. The right hand side of the screen shows a preview of the modifications made. To revert to the default values, click the Reset button in the bottom right corner. Using the Customize page, you can create complex structured layouts, for example a nested list with numbering followed by bullets (Figure 53).
Tip
You can also use the Tab key and Shift + Tab keys to promote and demote the outline level of a line in a list.
Using tables
Tables are a powerful mechanism to convey structured information quickly, so they represent an important tool when creating a presentation. You can create tables directly in Impress eliminating the need to embed a Calc spreadsheet or a Writer text table in your presentation. However, in some circumstances, it makes sense to embed a Calc spreadsheet, especially when you require greater functionality in the table. The tables provided by Impress do have a limited functionality. Many predefined table designs are available in the Table design section of the Tasks pane (Figure 54).
Creating a table
When working with tables, it is useful to know the number of rows and columns needed as well as the appearance. The parameters can be adjusted later, but this is more laborious than setting the correct table dimensions from the beginning. To insert a table, proceed as follows: 1) Select the slide which will contain the table and, if necessary, modify the slide layout to create space for the table. 2) Select Table Design (Figure 54) in the task pane. If the task pane is not visible, select View > Task pane.
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Figure 54: Table Design task pane 3) Select one of the predefined styles, which only differ in the color scheme. You will be able to change the table colors later on. However, it is recommended that you select a color scheme similar to the one you want. Selecting a style opens the Insert Table dialog (Figure 55) where you can specify the number of rows and columns.
Figure 55: Insert Table dialog The table is placed initially at the center of the slide, but you can move it by selecting it and then dragging it to the new position, or by using the method described in Position and size on page 72. You can also create a table directly by selecting Insert > Table from the main menu or with the Insert Table icon in the Standard toolbar. This opens the Insert Table dialog where you can specify the number of columns and rows. Click on the small black triangle next to the Insert Table icon to open a graphic tool for inserting a table (Figure 56). To use this tool, move the mouse to the right and down in the grid until you have the required number of columns and rows and then click the left mouse button to insert your table.
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Note
Modifying a table
Once the table is added to the slide, you can control its appearance, size, position and so on using a combination of the Task Pane options, the Table toolbar and the Table properties dialog.
Header Row: selected by default, it adds a first row with a different background from the
rest of the table.
Total Row: the opposite of Header row; if selected, it changes the background of the last
row to make it stand out from the other rows.
Banded Rows: selected by default, this option colors alternate rows with different
backgrounds making it easier to ready data presented in rows.
First Column: highlights the first column of the table by allocating a darker background to it. Last Column: does the same to the last column. Banded Columns: when selected, alternate columns are colored differently.
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Table toolbar
When a table is selected, eight colored selection handles appear around the edges and the Table toolbar (Figure 57) is displayed. If necessary, you can open the toolbar using View > Toolbars > Table. The Table toolbar contains the majority of the tools you need to manipulate a table and these are described below.
1 Table 2 Line style 3 Line color (border) 4 Borders 5 Area style/filling 6 Color area style/fillings
7 Merge Cells 8 Split Cells 9 Optimize 10 Text cell alignment - top 11 Text cell alignment - center 12 Text cell alignment - bottom
13 Insert Row 14 Insert Column 15 Delete Row 16 Delete Column 17 Table Design 18 Table Properties
Figure 57: The Table Toolbar Table Use to create a new table in the selected slide. Opens the Insert Table dialog (Figure 55) where you can select the desired number of rows and columns. Alternatively, click on the small black triangle next to the icon to open an Insert Table graphic tool (Figure 56). To use this tool, move the mouse to the right and down in the grid until you have the columns and rows you require and click the left mouse button. Line style Use to change the style of the line of the selected cells. Opens a new dialog where you can choose from a range of predefined styles. Line color (border) Open a color selection dialog where you can choose the color of the lines around the selected cells. Borders Use to select among some predefined border configurations. The borders are applied to the selected cells. If the desired border pattern is not available, you will need to use the Table properties dialog. Area style/filling In the drop-down menu, first choose how the selected cells should be filled: Invisible, Color, Gradient, Hatching, or Bitmap. Depending on the selection, the Available Fillings drop-down menu is populated with the available schemes. Refer to Chapter 6 Formatting Graphic Objects for details on how to manage area filling styles. Color area style/filling Color selection of an area style/filling from a drop down menu.
70 LibreOffice 3.5 Impress Guide
Merge cells Merges the selected cells into one cell. Note that the contents of the merged cells are also merged. Split cells The opposite operation of merge cells. Make sure that the cursor is positioned on the cell you want to split, then click to open the Split Cells dialog (Figure 58). Select the number of cells required from the split as well as whether the cell should be split horizontally or vertically. When splitting horizontally, you can select the into equal proportions option to get all cells of equal size. The contents of the split cell are kept in the original cell (the one on the left or top).
Figure 58: Split Cells dialog Optimize Evenly distributes the selected cells either horizontally or vertically. If you want to optimize the whole table, you can evenly distribute rows or columns by right-clicking on the table edge and selecting Row > Space Equally or Column > Space Equally from the pop-up menu. Vertical text cell alignment You can select the vertical alignment of text in a cell by selecting the required cells and choosing Top, Center or Bottom. The alignment commands can be applied to all the cells of the table by right-clicking on the edge of the table, choosing Cell from the pop-up menu and then choosing the required alignment. Insert or delete rows and columns Use the Table toolbar to insert or delete rows and columns of your table. Rows and columns are inserted/deleted below and to the right of the selected cell. You can insert rows and columns at the end of the table using the pop up menu that opens by right clicking on the edge of the table. The insert and delete commands are in the Row or Column menus. Table design The only purpose of this icon is to open the Table Design pane in the task pane. Table properties Click the Table Properties icon on the Table toolbar (Figure 57) to open the Format Cells dialog (Figure 59), which contains the following pages:
Font: use to select the desired font type, its base attributes (Italic, Bold, etc.) as well as the
size. A sample of the font is displayed in the lower part of the dialog. You can also specify the language. See Font page on page 58 for more information on the available options.
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Font Effects: use to apply special effects to the text, such as over lining and underlining,
color, shadow and so on. As for the Font page, a sample of the text is displayed in the lower part of the dialog, providing a quick visual check of the effects applied. See Font page on page 58 for more information on the available options.
Borders: use to set advanced properties not available from the Table Toolbar, such as the
spacing between the text and the border as well as setting the style of each individual border of the table separately. This page also provides the same options as the line style and line color buttons of the Table toolbar.
Note
Background: changes the background of the selected cells and provides the same
functions as the Area style/filling and Color area style/filling on the Table Toolbar.
The Table Properties dialog can also be accessed from the pop-up menu that opens when right-clicking on the table.
Note
Note
Deleting a table
To delete a table use one of the following methods:
Click in the slide and drag a box over the table to select it. Then press the delete key. Select all the rows in the table and use the Delete Row icon on the table toolbar (Figure
57).
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Using fields
Fields allow the automatic insertion of text into the slide. You can think of a field as a kind of formula which is calculated when the document is loaded or printed and the result is written in the document. Fields are commonly used when creating templates and slide masters, as explained in Chapter 2 Using Slide Masters, Styles, and Templates.
Inserting a field
To insert a field into a slide, move the cursor where the field will be and then select from the menu bar Insert > Fields followed by one of these choices:
Date (fixed): inserts the date at the date of inserting the field. Date (variable): inserts a field that is updated with the date at the time of opening the file. Time (fixed): inserts a field displaying the time at the time of insertion. Time (variable): inserts a field which is updated with the time at the time of opening the file. recorded in the general options. To modify this information go to Tools > Options > LibreOffice > User Data.
Author: inserts the author of the presentation. This information is derived from the value Page Number: inserts the page number of the slide. Page Count: inserts the total number of slides. File Name: inserts a field that contains the name of the file.
Customizing fields
The appearance of all the fields, excluding the page number field, can be customized from the corresponding field editor. To access the field editor (Figure 61): 1) Move the cursor to the field and select it. 2) Select Edit > Fields from the menu bar or right click on the field data.
Chapter 3 Adding and Formatting Text 73
Figure 61: Field Editor dialog 3) Select the desired format in the dialog that appears. 4) Click OK.
Tip
A similar list of format choices can be accessed by selecting the field and right-clicking.
Select the field and apply the formatting manually. Switch to the slide master editing mode (View > Master > Slide Master), then modify the
Background object style as desired. Once back in Normal view, insert page numbers from Insert > Page Number in the main menu. See Chapter 2 Using Slide Masters, Styles, and Templates for more information about editing a slide master.
Using hyperlinks
When inserting text (such as a website address or URL) that can be used as a hyperlink, Impress formats it automatically, creating the hyperlink and applying color and underlining. If you do not want Impress to do that, select Edit > Undo Insert from the menu bar or press Control+Z immediately after the formatting has been applied. You can also insert hyperlinks manually.
To prevent LibreOffice from automatically turning website addresses (URLs) into hyperlinks, go to Tools > AutoCorrect > Options and deselect the URL Recognition checkbox.
Tips
To change the color of hyperlinks, go to Tools > Options > LibreOffice > Appearance, scroll to Unvisited links and/or Visited links, select the checkboxes, pick the new colors and click OK. Caution: this will change the color for all hyperlinks in all components of LibreOffice which may not be what you want.
To insert a hyperlink, or to customize the appearance of a hyperlink, select Insert > Hyperlinks from the menu bar. The Hyperlink dialog opens (Figure 62).
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Figure 62: Dialog to edit hyperlinks On the left hand side, select one of the four types of hyperlinks. The top right part of the dialog changes according to the choice made for the hyperlink type. A full description of all the choices, and their interactions, is beyond the scope of this chapter. A summary of the most common choices used in presentation are given below.
Internet: choose whether the link is Web, FTP or Telnet. Enter the required web address
(URL).
Mail & News: choose whether the link is an E-mail or news link. Enter the receiver address
and for email, also the subject.
New Document: creates a hyperlink to a new document. Choose whether to edit the newly
created document immediately (Edit now) or just create it to edit later (Edit later). Choose the type of document to create (text, spreadsheet, etc.). For a presentation, Edit now is the more likely choice. The Select path button opens a file browser so that you can choose the directory for the new document.
For navigation within a presentation, it is generally better to use the object interaction menu that you can find either in the Drawing toolbar or in the pop-up menu that opens when right-clicking on an object.
Note
The Further settings section on the Hyperlink dialog is common to all the hyperlink types, although some choices are more relevant to some types of links.
Set the value of Frame to determine how the hyperlink will open. This applies to documents
that open in a Web browser.
Form specifies if the link is to be presented as text or as a button. See Working with
hyperlink buttons on page 76 for more information.
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Name is applicable to HTML documents. It specifies text that will be added as a NAME
attribute in the HTML code behind the hyperlink.
Figure 63: Form Control toolbar Now you can click on the hyperlink button and drag it to another position, or right-click to open a dialog where you can change the text on the button, the size of the button, and other properties. When you have finished editing the button, click the Design Mode On/Off icon again to make the button inactive. For a detailed description of the properties and how to work with Form Controls, refer to the Writer Guide.
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Introduction
Pictures are often used in presentations as they can convey a large amount of information more quickly than the written word. You can also give a more professional look to your presentation by adding a company logo. Also, you may want to use Impress to create a presentation consisting only of pictures, such as a slideshow of holiday snapshots to share with friends. This chapter describes how to insert and format pictures.
Inserting pictures
This section describes several ways to insert a picture from an external source into the presentation. Once the picture has been inserted, it can be formatted extensively as explained later in this chapter.
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Note
Select the Link option to insert the picture as a link to the file rather than embedding the file itself. In general it is preferable to embed images so that the presentation can be copied for use on other computers. On some occasions, however, it makes sense to link the image rather than embed it. These include:
When the image file is quite large and linking rather than embedding will dramatically
reduce the size of the presentation file.
When the same image file is used in many presentations. For example, when using the
same background image for all the presentations created.
When the linked file will be available when loading the presentation. For example, if the
presentation is a slide show of holiday pictures.
The scanner software driver has been installed on the computer. The scanner is supported by the SANE system if the computer operating system is Linux or
other UNIX-like operating system
The scanner is TWAIN compatible and the computer is operating Windows or Mac OS. The scanner is configured on the computer with LibreOffice software installed.
To insert an image from the scanner: 1) Prepare the image for the scanner and make sure that the scanner is switched on. 2) If more than one scanning device is connected to the computer, select the source from Insert > Picture > Scan > Select Source. 3) Choose Insert > Picture > Scan > Request.
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4) The rest of the procedure depends on the scanner driver and interface that is being used. Normally, and after a preview scan, you will be required to specify the scan resolution, selected what to scan on the preview and other parameters for example color or greyscale. Consult the documentation for the scanner for more information. 5) When the image has been scanned, Impress places it into the selected slide. At this point it can be edited as any other image.
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Figure 69. Selecting path for new images in themes 7) If you want to add all the files in the list, then click on Add All. All the files will disappear from the list and the images will appear in the Gallery. 8) Click OK when finished and the Theme Properties dialog will close.
Note
The image is a linked file and is deleted from the Gallery only. The original image file is not deleted.
All the images in a gallery are linked files. From time to time it is beneficial to update the gallery theme to make sure that all the files are still there. To do so, right-click on the theme where you added at least one file and then select Update from the pop-up menu.
Note
If you wish, you can rename this new theme by manually by right-clicking the theme name and selecting Rename.
Formatting pictures
This section discusses the formatting of pictures inserted with one of the methods explained in Inserting pictures on page 78.
Moving a picture
1) Click on the picture to select it and colored selection handles are displayed.
Chapter 4 Adding and Formatting Pictures 83
2) If necessary, move the mouse cursor over the picture until it changes shape. The cursor shape depends on the computer operating system, for example a four headed arrow or a hand. 3) Click and drag the picture to the desired position. 4) Release the mouse button. For a more accurate placement of a picture, use the Position and Size dialog described in Chapter 6, Formatting Graphic Objects.
Resizing a picture
1) Click the picture to show the colored selection handles. 2) Position the cursor over one of the colored selection handles. The cursor changes shape giving a graphical representation of the direction of the resizing. 3) Click and drag to resize the picture. 4) Release the mouse button when satisfied with the new size. For more accurate resizing of a picture, use the Position and Size dialog described in Chapter 6, Formatting Graphic Objects.
Note
The corner handles resize both the width and the height of the graphic object simultaneously, while the other four handles only resize one dimension at a time.
Tip
To retain the original proportions of the graphic, Shift+click one of the corner handles, then drag. Make sure to release the mouse button before releasing the Shift key.
Caution
Be aware that re-sizing a bit-mapped (raster) image will adversely affect the resolution, causing some degree of blurring. It is better to use a specialized graphics manipulation program to correctly scale the picture to the desired size before inserting it into your presentation. We recommend you use a tool such as Gimp (http://www.gimp.org/).
Rotating a picture
As with the position of the image on the page, rotation of a picture can be done manually or using a dedicated dialog. The Rotation dialog is described in Chapter 6, Formatting Graphic Objects. Rotate a picture manually as follows: 1) Select the picture to display the colored selection handles. 2) Click the Rotate icon on the Drawing toolbar and the selection handles change color (Figure 71). The color change will depend on the computer operating system and how the computer has been setup.
The icons representing the functions in the toolbars depend on the computer operating system used and how the computer has been setup, or whether LibreOffice has been customized or not. When in doubt, hover the mouse over the icons and wait for the tooltip to appear showing the name of the button.
Note
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Figure 71: Rotating pictures 3) A circle or circle with crosshairs (depending on computer system) appears in the centre of the picture indicating the rotation point. The center of the picture is the normal rotation point, but this rotation point can be moved to change the rotation center to a corner or to a point outside the picture. To do this, click on the rotation point and drag it to the desired position before applying the rotation. 4) The selection handles in each corner are the rotation handles and the cursor shape will change when moved over one of them. Click the mouse and move in the direction in which you want to rotate the picture. 5) When satisfied, release the mouse button.
To restrict the rotation angles to multiples of 15 degrees, press the Shift key while rotating the graphic. This is very handy to rotate pictures of right angles, for example from portrait to landscape or from landscape to portrait.
Tip
Applying filters
Use the filter icon on the Picture toolbar to apply various filters to the selected picture. The best way to judge if a filter works for your picture is to try it. To apply a filter: 1) Select the pictures so that the colored selection handles are displayed.
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2) Click on the filter icon to show the different filters that are available. Table 2 describes briefly each of the available graphic filters and their effects. See the Draw Guide for more information and examples of the effects. 3) Select the filter you wish to apply. To show the name of the filter, hover the cursor over the icon and wait for the tooltip to appear. 4) If you are not satisfied with the effect obtained or you want to try a different one, before doing anything else click the Undo icon in main toolbar or select Edit > Undo: Bitmap Graphic Filter from the menu bar or press Control+Z. Table 2: Graphic filters and their effects Icon Name
Invert Smooth Sharpen Remove noise Solarization Aging Posterize Pop Art Charcoal sketch Relief Mosaic
Effect
Inverts the color values of a color image, or the brightness values of a grayscale image. Softens the contrast of an image. Increases the contrast of an image. Removes single pixels from an image. Mimics the effects of too much light in a picture. A further dialog opens to adjust the parameters. Simulates the effects of time on a picture. Can be applied several times. A further dialog will open to adjust the aging level. Makes a picture appear like a painting by reducing the number of colors used. Modifies the picture dramatically. Displays the image as a charcoal sketch. A dialog is displayed to adjust the light source that in turn will create the shadow and hence the relief effect. Joins groups of pixels into a single area of one color.
Default: no changes to the graphic object. Grayscale: the image is converted to scales of gray. Black/White: each pixel of the image is converted to black or white depending on the
brightness value.
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Figure 73: Color Adjustment dialog Use this dialog to modify the individual color components of the image (red, green, blue) as well as the brightness, contrast, and gamma of the image. If the result is not satisfactory, press Control+Z to restore the default values. Increasing the gamma value of a picture makes it more suitable to be used as a background or watermark as it will interfere less with a dark text.
Cropping pictures
Impress provides two ways to crop a picture: interactively or using a dialog. The interactive method is easier to use, but the dialog provides more precise control. You can use both methods: first cropping interactively, then use the dialog to fine tune the result. To crop a selected picture interactively, click the Crop icon set of crop marks appears around the picture (Figure 74). on the Picture toolbar (Figure 72). A
Figure 74: Interactive crop marks When you place the cursor over any of the crop marks, the cursor changes shape. Drag the mark to crop the picture. Click outside the picture to deactivate cropping mode. Press the Shift button while working on the crop marks to produce the following effects:
For a corner mark, the two sides of the picture forming the corner are cropped
proportionally with the picture anchored to the opposite corner mark.
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For a side mark, both dimensions are changed proportionally with the image anchored to
the opposite side mark. The interactive crop mode operates in Keep Scale mode (see below). To crop using the dialog, right-click a selected picture and choose Crop Picture or choose Format > Crop Picture from the menu bar. The Crop dialog (Figure 75) has the following options:
Keep scale/Keep image size: when Keep scale is selected (default), cropping the image
does not alter the scale of the picture. When Keep image size is selected, cropping produces enlargement (for positive cropping values), shrinking (for negative cropping values), or distortion of the image so that the image size remains constant.
Left, Right, Top, and Bottom: the function of these boxes changes according to the choice
made between Keep scale and Keep image size. In both cases, when a value is entered in one of these boxes, the image is cropped by that amount. For example, a value of 3cm in the Left box will cut 3cm from the left side of the picture. When Keep scale is selected, the size of the image also changes, so in this example the width will be reduced by 3 cm. If Keep image size is selected instead, the remaining part of the image is enlarged (positive values for cropping) or shrunk (negative values for cropping) so that the width and height of the image remains unchanged. Note that the Width and Height fields change as you enter the values when in this mode. Use the thumbnail next to these fields to determine the correct amount by which to crop.
Scale Width and Height: specifies in percentages the scaling of the picture. The size of
the image changes accordingly.
Image size: specifies the size of the image in your preferred unit of measurement. The
image enlarges or shrinks accordingly.
Deleting a picture
1) Click on the picture and the colored selection handles are displayed. 2) Press Delete.
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Figure 76: Image Map Editor dialog for creating hotspots To use the image map tool to create or edit a hotspot: 1) Select the picture on a slide where hotspots are going to be defined. 2) Go to Edit > ImageMap on the main menu bar and the ImageMap Editor dialog opens (Figure 76). The main part of the dialog shows the image on which the hotspots will be defined. 3) Active hotspots are indicated by a colored border, while inactive hotspots are indicated by a black or grayed out border. 4) Use the tools at the top of the dialog and the fields to define hotspots and their links. 5) Click the Apply icon to apply the settings.
6) When done, click the Save icon to save the image map to a file, then click the X in the upper right corner to close the dialog. The top part of the dialog, from left to right, contains the following tools:
Apply icon: click this icon to apply any changes made. Open, Save, and Select icons.
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Rectangle, Ellipse, Polygon and FreeForm Polygon tools for drawing a hotspot shape.
These tools work in exactly the same way as the corresponding tools in the Drawing toolbar (described in Chapter 5 Managing Graphic Objects).
Edit, Move, Insert, Delete Points are advanced editing tools to manipulate the shape of a
polygon hotspot. Select Edit Points tool to activate the other tools.
Active icon: toggles the status of the hotspot activating a selected hotspot or deactivating it
if active.
Undo and Redo icons. Macro: associates a macro with the hotspot instead of a hyperlink. Properties: sets the hyperlink properties and adds the Name attribute to the hyperlink.
Below the toolbar are fields which specify the properties of a hotspot:
Address: the URL address that points to a hyperlink. You can also point to an anchor in a
document such as a specific slide number; to do this, write the address in this format: file:///<path>/document_name#anchor_name
Text: enter the text that will be displayed when the mouse is moved over the hotspot. Frame: where the target of the hyperlink will open: _blank (opens in a new browser
window), _self (default selection and opens in an active browser window), _top or _parent.
The value _self for the target frame will work on the vast majority of the occasions. It is not recommended to use the other values unless absolutely necessary.
Tip
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Introduction
This chapter describes how to manage graphic objects and in particular how to rotate, distort, arrange, and position them on the slide. Though this chapter focuses on the shapes that can be created with the available tools in Impress, some of the techniques described in this chapter are also applicable to images imported into slides.
Drawing toolbar
Default drawing tools
The Drawing toolbar (Figure 77) contains the majority of the tools normally used to create graphic objects. If this toolbar is not visible, select View > Toolbars > Drawing from the main menu bar. Table 3 describes the default set of tools that are available on the Drawing toolbar.
Note
Purpose
Selects objects. To select a group of objects, click above the top left object and drag the mouse below the bottom right object of the intended selection while keeping the mouse button pressed. A marching ants rectangle identifying the selection area is displayed. You can also select several objects by pressing and holding the Shift key while selecting the individual objects. Draws a straight line from the point where you click the mouse to the point where you drag the mouse pointer and release the mouse button. Press the Shift key to restrict the angle of the line to multiples of 45. Press the Alt key to draw a line from its center. Press the Control key to detach the end point of the line from the grid (see Snapping objects to grid or snap guides on page 106). Draws a straight line ending with an arrowhead. The arrowhead is placed at the end of the line where you release the mouse button. The Shift, Alt and Control keys have the same effect as for the Line tool. Draws a rectangle when you drag the mouse from the top left to the bottom right corner. Press the Shift key to draw a square. Press the Alt key to draw a rectangle or square from its center. Draws an ellipse. Press the Shift key to draw a circle. Press the Alt key to draw an ellipse or circle from its center. Creates a text box with text aligned horizontally.
Line
Ellipse Text
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Tool
Name
Vertical Text
Purpose
Creates a text box with text aligned vertically. This tool is available only when Asian language support has been enabled in Tools > Options > Language Settings > Languages. Draws a shape depending on the option that has been selected. Actual icon shown will depend on the option that has been selected. Click on the black triangle to show the available options Note that the title of this submenu when undocked from the drawing toolbar is Lines.
Curve
Connector
Draws a connector line between two figures. Actual icon shown will depend on the option that has been selected. Click on the black triangle to show the available options. Each option is described in Working with connectors on page 109.
Draws a line ending in an arrow. Actual icon shown will depend on the option that has been selected. Click on the black triangle to show the available options. Note that the title of this submenu when undocked from the drawing toolbar is Arrows.
Basic Shapes
Click the black triangle to open a toolbar showing the available options. Actual icon shown will depend on the option that has been selected. Select the desired basic shape, then draw it by placing your cursor on the slide and dragging your mouse to define an enclosing rectangle. Keep the Shift key pressed to obtain a basic shape where the height and width are equal. Press the Alt key to draw a basic shape from its center.
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Tool
Name
Symbol Shapes
Purpose
Click the black triangle to open a toolbar showing the available options. Actual icon shown will depend on the option that has been selected. Select the desired symbol shape, then draw it by placing your cursor on the slide and dragging your mouse to define an enclosing rectangle. Keep the Shift key pressed to obtain a symbol shape where the height and width are equal. Press the Alt key to draw a symbol shape from its center.
Block Arrows
Click the black triangle to open a toolbar showing the available options. Actual icon shown will depend on the option that has been selected. Select the desired block arrow, then draw it by placing your cursor on the slide and dragging your mouse to define an enclosing rectangle. Keep the Shift key pressed to obtain a block arrow where the height and width are equal. Press the Alt key to draw a block arrow from its center.
Flowcharts
Click the black triangle to open a toolbar showing the available options. Actual icon shown will depend on the option that has been selected. Select the desired flowchart shape, then draw it by placing your cursor on the slide and dragging your mouse to define an enclosing rectangle. Keep the Shift key pressed to obtain a flowchart where the height and width are equal. Press the Alt key to draw a flowchart shape from its center.
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Tool
Name
Callouts
Purpose
Click the black triangle to open a toolbar showing the available options. Actual icon shown will depend on the option that has been selected. Select the desired callout, then draw it by placing your cursor on the slide and dragging your mouse to define an enclosing rectangle. Keep the Shift key pressed to obtain a callout where the height and width are equal. Press the Alt key to draw a callout from its center.
Stars
Click the black triangle to open a toolbar showing the available options. Actual icon shown will depend on the option that has been selected. Select the desired star, then draw it by placing your cursor on the slide and dragging your mouse to define an enclosing rectangle. Keep the Shift key pressed to obtain a star where the height and width are equal. Press the Alt key to draw a star from its center. Note that the title of this submenu when undocked from the drawing toolbar is Starts and Banners.
Points
Edits the individual points that form the shape or line. Select this tool and then select a shape or a line. You can also press the F8 key to select this tool. Edits the glue points of a graphic object. Glue points are the positions where connector lines terminate or start. See Managing glue points on page 110 for instructions. Opens the Fontwork gallery. See Using Fontwork on page 114 for further information. Equivalent to Insert > Picture > From file on the main menu. See Chapter 4 for details. Opens the gallery. Equivalent to Tools > Gallery on the main menu. See Chapter 4 Adding and Formatting Pictures for details. Select this tool to rotate an object. As rotation is considered a formatting attribute and this is discussed in Chapter 6 Formatting Graphic Objects of this guide. See Aligning shapes on page 106. Click the black triangle to open a toolbar showing the available options. Actual icon shown will depend on the option that has been selected.
Glue Points
Alignment
Arrange
See Arranging objects on page 108. Click the black triangle to open a toolbar showing the available options. Actual icon shown will depend on the option that has been selected. Note that the title of this submenu when undocked from the drawing toolbar is Position.
Switches 3D effects on or off for the selected object. Clicking this button also opens the 3D settings toolbar. See Working with 3D shapes on page 110 for details. Opens a dialog where you can specify the interaction between the user and the object. See Setting up interaction with an object on page 113.
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Purpose
Click the black triangle to open a toolbar showing the available options. Actual icon shown will depend on the option that has been selected. Select the desired 3D shape, then draw it by placing your cursor on the slide and dragging your mouse to define an enclosing rectangle. Keep the Shift key pressed to obtain a 3D shape where the height and width are equal. Press the Alt key to draw a 3D shape from its center.
To Curve To Polygon
Converts the selected object to a Bzier curve. Converts the selected object to a polygon (a closed object bounded by straight lines). The appearance of the object does not change. If you want, you can right-click and choose Edit Points to view the changes. Converts the selected 2D object to a 3D object. Converts the selected 2D object to a 3D rotation object.
Opens the Position and Size dialog. You can also press the F4 key to open this dialog. Flips the selected object horizontally, or vertically. Allows you to insert a slide, table, from file, movie and sound, formula, or chart into your presentation. Click the black triangle to open the Insert toolbar showing the available options. Actual icon shown will depend on the option that has been selected.
Controls
Allows you to insert various form controls into your presentation. Click the black triangle to open the Form Controls toolbar showing the available options.
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Tool
Name
Custom Animation Animated Image 3D Effects
Purpose
Adds a new animation effect to an object selected in the slide, or changes the animation of a selected element. Opens the Custom Animation section in the Tasks pane. Adds animation to a selected object on a slide. Opens the Animation dialog. Specifies the properties of a 3D object or converts a 2D object to 3D. Opens the 3D Effects dialog.
Figure 78: Curve tool options 1) 2) 3) 4) Click on the black triangle next to the Curve icon and select a tool. Click once on the slide and move the cursor to draw the first segment. Click once again and drawn the next segment of your freehand polygon. To finish creating your freehand polygon, double-click when you have drawn the last segment. If a closed polygon was selected, Impress draws the line connecting the last point to the start point and fills the inside area with the default color. 5) Keep the Shift key pressed to restrict the angle between the segments to multiples of 45 degrees. When drawing certain regular shapes, one or more colored dots are displayed in a different color to the colored resizing handles. These dots perform a different function according to the shape they are applied to and are as follows: Basic Shapes
Rounded rectangles and squares: use the dot to change the radius of the curve that
replaces the angled corners of a rectangle or square.
Circle pie: use the yellow dots to change the size of the filled sector. Isosceles triangle: use the dot to modify the triangle type. Trapezoid, parallelogram, hexagon, or octagon: use the dot to change the angle between
the sides.
Cross: use the dot to change the thickness of the four arms of the cross. Ring: use the dot to change the internal diameter of the ring. Block arc: use the dot to change both internal diameter and size of the filled area. Cylinder and cube: use the dot to change the perspective. Folded corner: use the dot to change the size of the folded corner. Frame: use the dot to change the thickness of the frame.
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Symbol Shapes
Smiley face: use the dot to change the smile on the face. Sun, moon, heart: use the dot to change the shape of the symbol. Prohibited symbol: use the do to change the thickness of the ring and the diagonal bar. Double bracket, left bracket, right bracket, double brace: use the dot to change the curvature of the bracket. of the point.
Left brace, right brace: use the dots to change the curvature of the brace and the position Square bevel, octagon bevel, diamond bevel: use the dot to change the thickness of the
bevel. Block Arrows
Circular arrow: use the dots to change the thickness and area of the arrow. Callouts
Arrows: use the dot to change the shape and thickness of the arrows. Pentagon, chevron: use the dot to change the angle between the sides. Arrow callouts: use the dots to change the shape and thickness of the callouts.
Callouts: use the dots to change the length, position and angle of the pointer.
Stars
4-point star, 8-point star, 24-point star: use the dot to change the thickness and shape of
the star points.
Vertical scroll, horizontal scroll: use the dot to change the width and shape of the scroll. Doorplate: use the dot to change the inward curvature of the corners.
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2) When the colored selection handles show, select Format > Group > Ungroup from the menu bar or press Control+Alt+Shift+G or right-click on the group and choose Ungroup. For more about working with grouped objects, see the Draw Guide Chapter 5, Combining Multiple Objects.
If you use the group and ungroup commands often, why not add them to one of the toolbars shown by default so that the commands are readily available? To do so, you will need to customize the selected toolbar. See Chapter 11, Setting Up and Customizing Impress.
Tip
Tip
For a more accurate placement of the graphic object, use the Position and Size dialog (Figure 79). With the graphic object selected and the colored selection handles displayed, either press F4 or select Format > Position and Size from the menu bar, or right click on the selected object and select Position and Size.
Use the Position section of the dialog to specify the X (horizontal) and Y (vertical) position of the graphic object. The values represent the distance of the base point (selected on the right hand side of the dialog) relative to the top left corner of the slide. To prevent accidental modification of the position of the graphic object, select the Position option in the Protect section (bottom left) of the dialog. The unit of measurement for this dialog and other dialogs is set in Tools > Options > LibreOffice Impress > General.
Tip
To retain the original proportions of the graphic, Shift+click one of the corner handles, then drag. Be sure to release the mouse button before releasing the Shift key.
For more accurate resizing of the graphic object, use the Position and Size dialog (Figure 79). 1) Select the graphic object and open the Position and Size dialog. 2) Select as the base point the part of the graphic object that you would like to anchor to the page. The default setting (top left corner) means that when resizing, the position of the top left corner of the object will not change. 3) Now modify either the Width value or the Height value of the object. 4) To maintain the proportions between width and height, select the Keep ratio option before modifying any value. When Keep ratio is selected, changes to one of the dimension result in automatic changes to the other. 5) To prevent accidental modifications of the size, make sure that the Size option is selected in the Protect section in the bottom left part of the dialog.
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Note
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When the Rotate icon is clicked, a circle appears in the middle of the selected object to indicate the pivot point for rotation. Normally the center of an object will be just fine, but on some occasions you may wish to rotate around a corner or even around a point outside the picture. To move the rotation point, click on the circle and drag it to the desired position. To restrict the rotation angles to multiples of 15 degrees, press and hold the Shift key while rotating the graphic. This is very handy for rotating pictures through a right angle, for example from portrait to landscape. Instead of rotating a graphic object manually, you can use the Rotation dialog (Figure 82). To display this dialog, select the graphic object so that the selection handles are shown, then press F4 or select Format > Position and Size and select the Rotation page. In the upper part of the dialog, select the position of the pivot point relative to the top left corner of the page. The default position of the pivot point is the center of the figure. In the lower part of the dialog select the angle by which to rotate the graphic object. To the right of the Angle text box, eight default rotation values can be selected.
Flipping objects
The quickest and easiest method to flip an object horizontally or vertically is as follows: 1) Click on a graphic object and the colored selection handles will show. 2) Right click and select Flip > Horizontally or Flip > Vertically and the selected object will be flipped to face the other direction. The Flip tool on the Drawing or Mode toolbar can also be used. Using this tool also allows you to change the position and angle that the object flips over (Figure 83). 1) Click on a graphic object and the colored selection handles will show. 2) Click on the Flip icon and the axis of symmetry appears as a dashed line through the middle of the object. The object will be flipped about this axis of symmetry.
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Figure 83: Using the Flip tool 3) Move one or both ends of the axis of symmetry with your mouse cursor to set the orientation of the axis. 4) Place the mouse cursor over one of the object selection handles until it changes shape. 5) Click and hold, then move your cursor across the other side of the axis of symmetry. The new position of the figure is shown faintly until the mouse is released. 6) Release the mouse button and the object will appear flipped over. Angle and position of the flip will depend on the angle and position of the axis of symmetry.
Note
If you press the Shift key while moving the axis of symmetry and it will rotate in 45degree increments.
Mirror copies
At the moment there is no mirror command existing in Draw or Impress. However, mirroring an object can be emulated by using the Flip tool as follows: 1) Select the object you want to make a mirror copy of (Figure 84).
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2) 3) 4) 5) 6) 7)
Copy the object to the clipboard. Select the Flip tool on the Drawing or Mode toolbar. Move the axis of symmetry to the desired location of the mirror axis. Flip the object. Click on an empty area of the page to deselect the object. Paste from the clipboard to put a copy of the object in its original location and now you have a mirror copy.
Distorting an image
Three tools on the Mode toolbar let you drag the corners and edges of an object to distort the image. The Distort tool Set in Circle (perspective) distorts an object in perspective, and Set to Circle (slant) tools both create a pseudo three-dimensional effect. and
In all three cases you are initially asked if you want to transform the object to a curve. This is a necessary first step, so click Yes. Then you can move the object handles to produce the desired effect. The results of using these tools are shown in the following figures.
Distort tool
Select an object and click on the Distort icon on the Mode toolbar. After converting to a curve as requested, move the handles to stretch the object. The corner handles distort the corners, the vertical midpoint handles distort the figure horizontally and the horizontal ones distort it vertically (Figure 85).
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Note
Transforming an object into a curve is a safe operation, but it cannot be reversed other than by clicking the Undo button.
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Aligning shapes
Use the alignment tools to adjust the relative position of a graphic object compared to another object. Click on the black triangle next to the Alignment icon in the Drawing toolbar or go to View > Toolbars > Align on the main menu bar to open the Align toolbar (Figure 88). These alignment options are also available when you right-click on a selected object.
Figure 88: Align toolbar and available options The toolbar has six icons. The first three determine the horizontal alignment of the selected objects (Left, Center, Right); the other three determine the vertical alignment of the selected objects (Top, Middle, Bottom). Actual Alignment icon shown on the Drawing toolbar will depend on the option that has been selected. If only one object is selected, it is aligned to the page. If several objects are selected together, they are aligned to the object that selected first.
Visible Grid (right click) or Display Grid (menu): displays the grid. Snap to Grid: the anchor points of an object will be placed on a grid when the object is
moved or resized.
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Snap Lines Visible (right click) or Display Guides (menu): the guides are shown on the
slide.
Snap to Snap Lines (right click) or Snap to Guides (menu): the anchor points of the
objects snap to the guides when the object is moved or resized.
Snap Lines to Front (right click) or Guides to Front (menu): displays the guides in the
foreground.
Note
The main menu uses the term Guides, but the pop-up menu refers to Snap Lines.
Figure 89: New Snap Object dialog To create a new guide: 1) Right-click on an empty part of the work area and select Insert Snap Point/Line from the pop-up menu to open the New Snap Object dialog (Figure 89). 2) Specify the type of snap object. Depending on the choice made determines which field becomes active: Point both X and Y fields become active, Vertical only X field becomes active, Horizontal only Y field become active. 3) Enter the position of the guide. 4) Click OK to close the dialog.
When positioning the Snap Guides, it is useful to display the rulers. To do so, select View > Rulers. Drag a Snap Guide directly onto the slide by clicking on the ruler and then dragging onto the slide.
Tip
To edit a guide: 1) Right-click next to or on the guide to be edited. 2) Select Edit Snap line from the pop-up menu. 3) Enter a new value in the X or Y field for the guide position and click OK.
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To delete a guide: 1) Right-click next or on the guide to be deleted. 2) Choose Delete Snap line from the pop-up menu.
Arranging objects
Impress and Draw organize objects in a stack so that the objects on the top level of the stack cover the objects on lower levels if any overlapping occurs. The stack level of each object can be changed by arranging shapes on a slide or page. To change the stack level of an object, select an object or objects and then click the small triangle on the side of the Arrange icon on the Drawing toolbar to open the Position toolbar (Figure 90). The arrange or position options are also available by right-clicking on a selected object.
Figure 90: Position toolbar for arranging objects The first four tools determine the stack level of a selected object:
Bring to front: the selected object is moved in front of all other objects. Bring forward: the selected object is moved one level up in the stack. Send backwards: the selected object is moved one level down in the stack. Send to back: the selected object is moved behind all other objects.
The other three tools determine the relative positions of the selected objects:
In front of object: moves the first selected object in front of the second selected object. Behind object: moves the first selected object behind the second selected object. Reverse: swaps the stacking order of two selected objects.
To use the In front of object and Behind object tools: 1) Select the first object by clicking on it. 2) When the selection handles show, select the desired arrange action. 3) The mouse pointer changes to a pointing hand. Click on the second object.
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For more instructions on how to format a connector, refer to the corresponding section in Chapter 6, Formatting Graphic Objects.
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The first tool to insert a new glue point onto an object. The next four tools determine the exit direction of the connector terminating at the glue point. To maintain the relative position of the glue point when resizing the object, make sure that the Glue point relative icon is selected. Deselecting the Glue point relative icon activates the remaining six icons on the toolbar. use these tools to fix the position of the glue point during the resizing of the object. To delete a custom glue point, select it with the mouse and press the Delete key. Setting custom glue points is useful where multiple connectors terminate on the same side of a shape or where the default glue point position is not satisfactory. To move a predefined or newly inserted glue point: 1) Select the glue point tool from the drawing toolbar. 2) Click on the glue point you want to move. The glue point should now be highlighted. 3) Keep the mouse button pressed and drag the glue point to the desired position. Release the mouse button.
Glue points are placed by default on the grid (see Snapping objects to grid or snap guides on page 106 for information). However it is sometimes necessary to fine tune the position of a glue point depending on the shape of the object. To do this, press the Control key to display guide lines and keep the Control key pressed while dragging the glue point to the new position.
Tip
is not included on the Drawing toolbar, click on the small triangle at the end of the Drawing toolbar, select Visible Buttons, and then select 3D-Objects from the list. On the Drawing toolbar, click on the small triangle next to the 3D-Objects icon to display the 3D Objects toolbar (Figure 92).
From the Convert sub-menu. Select a shape, right-click on it. In the Convert sub menu
choose either To 3D to add thickness to the object or To 3D Rotation Object to create a 3D shape resulting from the rotation of the object around an axis.
on the Drawing toolbar. Select the object to apply a 3D effect, then click the Extrusion on/off icon on the Drawing toolbar to open the 3DSettings toolbar (Figure 93).
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Purpose
Adds thickness to an object and activates the 3D properties. Tilts the object downwards around a horizontal axis. Tilts the object up around a horizontal axis. Tilts the object left around a vertical axis. Tilts the object right around a vertical axis. Determines the thickness of the shape. An extended toolbar opens where some default values are given. If none of the values are satisfactory, select Custom and then enter the desired thickness. Opens an extended toolbar that lets you pick the direction of the perspective as well as the type (parallel or perspective). Opens an extended toolbar that lets you specify the direction and intensity of light. Choose between Wire frame (useful when manipulating the object), Matt, Plastic or Metal. Selects the color of the object thickness.
Although Impress offers advanced functions to manipulate 3D objects, this guide describes only the 3D settings applicable to an object with Extrusion enabled. For additional information on how to use advanced 3D effects such as geometry and shading, refer to the Draw Guide.
Caution
You cannot apply extrusion to rectangular and oval shapes created by using the rectangle or oval tools. Instead, select the desired shape from the basic shapes menu to create a rectangle or oval with 3D effects. Alternatively, right-click on the object, then select Convert > To 3D. Note that in this case the Extrusion on/off menu will not be enabled.
Select an object, then click on the Extrusion on/off icon to activate the extrusion. The object shape changes and a default thickness is added to it. At the same time the 3D-Settings toolbar (Figure 93) opens. If this toolbar does not appear, select View > Toolbars > 3D-Settings. Use these tools to change the appearance of the 3D object and these are listed in Table 5. An example of an object converted to 3D is shown in Figure 94.
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Figure 94: Example object converted to 3D Most of the Fontwork shapes (see Using Fontwork on page 114) have 3D properties and can be manipulated with the 3D-Settings toolbar. Note that when rotating a 3D object, in addition to the corner selection handles, four selection handles on the sides of the frame become available.
To Curve: converts the selected object to a Bzier curve. Click on the Points icon
the Drawing toolbar to edit the points after conversion to a Bzier curve. object after conversion to a polygon. A polygon always consists of straight segments.
on
To Polygon: converts the selected object to a polygon. Click on the Points icon to edit the To Contour: for basic shapes, this is equivalent to converting to polygon. For more
complex shapes (or for text objects) this conversion creates a group of polygons that you can then manipulate by pressing F3 to enter the group.
To 3D: converts the selected object to a 3D object. To 3D Rotation Object: creates a three-dimensional shape by rotating the selected object
around its vertical axis.
To Bitmap: converts the selected object to a bitmap. To Metafile: converts the selected object to Windows Metafile Format (WMF), containing
both bitmap and vector graphic data.
In most cases the conversion to a different type does not produce immediately visible results. To Curve, To Polygon, To 3D and To 3D Rotation Object can be added to the Drawing toolbar as additional tools by clicking on the small triangle at the right of the toolbar and selecting Visible Buttons.
Note
Tip
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Figure 95: Interaction dialog Table 6: Interaction types and their parameters Interaction
Go to previous slide Go to next slide Go to first slide Go to last slide Go to page or object Go to document
Parameters
No parameters. No parameters. No parameters. No parameters. Specify the target from the list in the Target box. You can search for a specific target in the Slide/Object box at the bottom of the screen. Select the document in the Document box. Use the Browse button to open a File Open dialog. If the document to be opened is in Open Document Presentation format, the target list will be populated allowing selection of the specific target. Select the file containing the sound to be played. Use the Browse button to open a File Open dialog. Select the program to execute. Use the Browse button to open a File Open dialog. Select a macro that will run during the presentation. Use the Browse button to open the Macro Selector dialog. When the mouse is clicked over the object, the presentation will terminate.
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Using Fontwork
Use Fontwork to obtain special text effects. For more about this topic, see Chapter 11 Graphics, the Gallery, and Fontwork in the Getting Started guide.
Figure 96: Fontwork Gallery To start using Fontwork: 1) To open the Fontwork Gallery (Figure 96), click on the Fontwork Gallery icon on the Drawing toolbar or on the Fontwork toolbar (Figure 97). If the Drawing toolbar is not showing, you can go directly to the Fontwork toolbar by selecting View > Toolbars > Fontwork from the main menu bar. 2) Select the preferred style from the Fontwork Gallery (Figure 96) and click OK. The text Fontwork in the selected style appears on the slide. You can modify its shape and properties after it has been placed on the slide. 3) Double-click the object to edit the Fontwork text. Type your own text to replace the word Fontwork that appears over the object. 4) Press the Esc key or click outside the area with the colored resizing handles to exit. 5) You can edit some of its attributes by using the Fontwork toolbar or tools that are used to change attributes of objects.
Fontwork Shape
: changes the shape of the selected object. Shapes are selected from the toolbar (Figure 98) that opens when this tool is selected.
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: changes the height of characters in the selected object. Toggles between normal height where characters have different heights to where all characters are the same height. : specifies the text alignment within the frame from the choices available.
Fontwork Alignment:
: selects the desired spacing between characters and whether kerning pairs should be used. For custom spacing, input a percentage value: 100% is normal spacing; less than 100% is tight spacing; more than 100% is expanded spacing.
Tip
You can change Fontwork color quickly using the Area fill color swatch on the Line and Filling toolbar.
You can modify some of the Fontwork shapes just as you modify the angles of trapezoid and parallelogram basic shapes by moving the dot that is displayed along with the colored resizing handles.
Animations
Animated slide transitions can be added between slides to give your presentation a more professional look when you change to the next slide (see Chapter 9 Slide Shows for more information on transitions). However, Impress also allows you to add animations onto the slides to create more interest in your presentation. An animation consists of a sequence of images or objects called frames that are displayed in succession when the animation runs. Each frame may contain one or more objects. For example, make bullet points appear one by one; make pictures, shapes or other objects appear singly or as a group onto a slide. Animations can be controlled using the keyboard or mouse click or automatically in a timed sequence.
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There are two ways to create an animation in Impress Custom Animation (page 116) or Insert > Animated Image (page 119) and both are described below.
Animations can look great in a presentation, but overuse of animations can make a good presentation into a poor presentation. Always use discretion when adding animations to your presentation.
Tip
Custom Animation
Custom Animation (Figure 99) is located in the Tasks pane to the right of the Workspace in Impress. It is used to add an animation effect to a selected object on a slide, or change the animation effect of a selected object.
Note
Anything that can be placed onto a slide is an object. For example, an object can include a picture, clip art drawing or text and so on.
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Add: opens the Custom Animation dialog (Figure 100) to add an animation effect to a
selected object on the slide.
Change: opens the Custom Animation dialog to change the animation effect of a selected
object.
Remove: removes any animation effects from a selected object. Start: displays the start property of the selected animation effect. The following start
properties are available:
On click: the animation stops at this effect until the next mouse click. With previous: the animation runs immediately. After previous: the animation runs as soon as the previous animation ends.
Property: selects additional properties of an animation. Click the button to open the
Effect Options dialog (Figure 101), where you can select, adjust and apply properties.
The name of this option will change depending on the type of effect that has been selected, for example Property, Line Color, Direction, Font and so on. Also the options offered in the Effect Options dialog will also change depending on the type of effect and object that has been selected.
Note
Speed: specifies the speed or duration of the selected animation effect. Change order: click one of the buttons to move the selected animation effect up or down in
the order.
Slide Show: starts the slide show from the current slide. Automatic preview: select to preview any new or edited effects on the slide while you
assign them. The Custom Animation dialog (Figure 100) contains the following categories of effects in tabbed pages:
Entrance: how an object appears on the slide. Emphasis: how an object is emphasized when it appears on the slide. Exit: how an object leaves the slide. Motion Paths: how an object moves on the slide during animation. Misc Effects: selects media effects from the miscellaneous effects. Speed: specifies the speed or duration of the selected animation effect. Automatic preview: previews any new or edited effects on the slide.
Note
2) 3) 4) 5)
Select an object on a slide. Click on Add in Custom Animation to open the Custom Animation dialog (Figure 100). Select an effect category and the type of effect you want to apply to the selected object. Select the speed (if available) of the effect from the drop down menu and then click on the OK button.
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6) Select the type of Property from the drop down menu. 7) If required, click on the button to open the Effect Options dialog (Figure 101) to set the effect options, then click on the OK button.
The name of this option will change depending on the type of effect that has been selected, for example Property, Line Color, Direction, Font and so on. Also the options offered in the Effect Options dialog will also change depending on the type of effect and object that has been selected.
Note
8) If required, adjust the animation speed using the Speed drop down menu. 9) If required, change the appearance order of the objects in the animation using the Change order arrows. 10) If required, click on the Play button to check the animation effect. 11) When you are satisfied, click on the Slide Show button to check your presentation.
Figure 102: Animation dialog Table 7: Animation dialog controls Control Control Name
First image Backwards
Purpose
Jumps to the first image in the animation sequence. Plays the animation backwards.
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Control
Control Name
Stop Play Last image Image number
Purpose
Stops playing the animation. Plays the animation. Jumps to the last image in the animation sequence. Indicates the position of the current image in the animation sequence. If you want to view another image, enter its number or click the up and down arrows. Enter the number of seconds to display the current image. This option is only available if you select Bitmap object in Animation group. Sets the number of times that animation will play. If you want the animation to play continuously, select Max. Adds selected object or objects as a single image. Adds an image for each selected object. If you select a grouped object, an image is created for each object in the group. You can also select an animation, such as an animated GIF, and click this icon to open it for editing. When you are finished editing the animation, click Create to insert a new animation into your slide.
Duration
Deletes the current image from the animation sequence. Deletes all images in the animation. Total number of images in the animation. Assembles images into a single object so that they can be moved as a group. You can still edit individual objects by double-clicking the group in the slide.
Combines images into a single image. Inserts the animation into the current slide.
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5) When you are ready, create the second frame of the animation and click Apply Object again to add another frame to the animation. 6) Repeat steps 3, 4 and 5 until you have created all the desired frames of the animation. 7) Select Bitmap object in the Animation group section of the Animator dialog to customize the timing of each of the frames and the number of repetitions for the animation. Set the number of repetitions to Max to obtain a continuous loop for your animation. 8) Click Create and the animated image is placed on the slide.
If the image to be copied in the Animator consists of several objects, you can choose to treat each object as a separate frame. In this case click on Apply objects individually icon. Remember that each object will be centered in the animation.
Note
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Formatting objects
This chapter describes how to format the graphic objects created with the available drawing tools. The format of each graphic object, in addition to its size, rotation and position on the slide, is determined by a number of attributes that define the line, text and area fill of each object. These attributes (among others) also contribute to a graphics style. Although this chapter discusses mainly the manual formatting of objects, it concludes by showing how to create, apply, modify and delete graphics styles.
Formatting lines
In LibreOffice the term line indicates both a freestanding segment and the outer edge of a shape. In most cases the properties of the line you can modify are its style (solid, dashed, invisible, and so on), its width and its color. All these options can be applied with a few clicks of the mouse. Select the line you need to format and then use the controls on the Line and Filling toolbar to select your desired options.
Figure 103: Common line options (style, width, color) highlighted If you need to fine tune the appearance of a line, choose Format > Line from the menu bar, or right-click on the line and select Line from the pop-up menu, or select the Line icon from the Line and Filling toolbar. All of these methods open the Line dialog shown in Figure 104, where you can set line properties. This dialog consists of four pages: Line, Shadow, Line Styles, and Arrow Styles.
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Line page
The Line page is where you can set the basic parameters of the line and is divided into four sections as follows.
Line style: several line styles are available from the drop-down list, but more line styles
can be defined if necessary.
Color: choose from the predefined colors in the drop down list or refer to Creating custom
colors on page 133 to create a new color.
Width: specifies the thickness of the line. Transparency: sets the transparency of a line. Figure 105 illustrates the effects of different
percentages of transparency to lines when placed over an object.
Figure 105: Line transparency effect (0%, 25%, 50%, 75% left to right)
Style: sets the style of the two ends of a line. The left drop down menu is for where you
start the line and the right drop down menu is for where you end the line.
Width: specifies the thickness of the arrow endings Center: moves the center of the arrow endings to the end point of the line. Figure 106
shows the effects of selecting this option.
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Arrowheads
A quick way to set the arrowheads for a selected line is to click on the Arrow Style icon in the Line and Filling toolbar (Figure 103). This opens the Arrowheads menu (Figure 107), where you can choose one of the many predefined arrowhead styles for the start and ending of the selected line.
Preview section
The bottom part of the Line page previews the applied style for a line and two different corners so that the corner style selection can be evaluated.
Shadow page
Use the Shadow page of the Line dialog to add and format the line shadow. The settings on this page are the same as those for shadows applied to other objects and are described in Formatting shadows on page 140. A quicker way to apply a shadow to a line is using the Shadow icon on the Line and Filling toolbar (Figure 103). The main disadvantage of using the Shadow icon is that the shadow appearance will be constrained by the shadow settings of the default graphics style.
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Figure 108: Creating line styles To create a new line style: 1) Choose Format > Line from the menu bar, or right-click on the line and select Line from the pop-up menu, or select the Line icon from the Line and Filling toolbar. 2) Click on the Line Styles tab. 3) Select from the Line style drop-down menu a style similar to the style you want to create. 4) Click Add. On the pop-up dialog, type a name for the new line style and click OK. 5) Now define the new style. Start by selecting the line type for the new style. To alternate two line types (for example, dashes and dots) within a single line, select different types in the two Type boxes. 6) Specify the Number and Length (not available for dot style) of each of the types of line selected. 7) Set the Spacing between the various elements 8) If necessary, select Fit to line width so that the new style fits the length of the selected line. 9) The new line style created is available only in the current document. If you want to use the line style in other presentations, click the Save Line Styles icon and type a unique filename in the Save as dialog that opens. Saved styles have the file extension of .sod. 10) To use previously saved line styles, click the Load Line Styles icon and select a style from the saved list of styles. Click Open to load the style into your presentation. 11) If necessary, click on the Modify button to change the name of the style.
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Figure 109: Creating arrow Styles 1) First draw a curve in the shape you want to use for the arrowhead or create a shape and convert to a curve. The top of the shape must face upward, as shown in Figure 110, because this becomes the point of the arrow.
The arrowhead created must be a curve. A curve is something you can draw without lifting a pencil. For example, is a curve and can be converted to a curve. However, is not a curve and cannot be converted to a curve.
Note
Figure 110: Using shapes for arrow styles 2) Select the shape and, if necessary, right click and choose Convert > To Curve to convert the shape to a curve. If the shape is already a curve To Curve will not be available. 3) With the selection handles showing, select Format > Line from the menu bar, or right-click and choose Line from the pop-up menu. 4) Go to the Arrow styles page (Figure 109), click the Add button, type a name for the new arrow style, and click OK. The new arrowhead style will be shown in the preview. 5) Now you can access the new style from the Arrow style list. When you select the name of the new style, it is shown at the bottom of the dialog.
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6) The new arrowhead style created is available only in the current document. If you want to use this arrowhead style in other presentations, click the Save Line Styles icon and type a unique filename in the Save as dialog that opens. Saved styles have the file extension of .sod. 7) To use previously saved arrowhead styles, click the Load Line Styles icon and select the style from the saved list of styles. Click Open to load the style into your presentation. 8) If necessary. click on the Modify button to change the name of the style.
Figure 111: Different types of area fill The Line and Filling toolbar has the majority of the tools normally used to format graphic objects. If this toolbar is not showing, choose View > Toolbars > Line and Filling from the menu bar. You can also use the Area dialog, described on page 131. To format the area of an object, select it so that the selection handles show. A wide number of default fillings are readily available from the Line and Filling toolbar (Figure 112). Select from the Color pull-down menu the type of fill required (Figure 113). If you want no fill at all, select Invisible. Once you have decided on a predefined or custom fill, you can further refine it by adding a shadow or transparency.
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Use the Area tab to apply predefined fills, both those supplied with LibreOffice and those you create yourself. Use the Colors, Gradients, Hatching, and Bitmaps tabs to define new fills, as described in Creating new area fills on page 133. The Transparency tab is discussed on page 141. To make the object cast a shadow, see page 140. To apply an area fill, first select in the top left drop-down list the required fill type. The page changes to show in the middle section the list of predefined styles for that fill type.
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Note
In the Area dialog, the choice for no fill is None rather than Invisible.
When using the Area tab of the Area dialog, some additional options may become available once you have selected the fill type and one of the available fill styles.
For color fills, select Color from the drop down list and then select your required color from
the list of available colors. Click on the OK button and the fill color will appear in the selected shape (Figure 118).
For gradient fills, select Gradient from the drop down list and then select your required
gradient from the list of available gradients. Click on the OK button and the fill gradient will appear in the selected shape (Figure 119). You can override the number of steps (increments) that should be applied to the gradient transition. To do so, deselect the Automatic option under Increments and then enter the number of steps required in the box to the right.
For hatching fills, select Hatching from the drop down list and then select your required
hatching from the list of available hatchings. Click on the OK button and the fill hatching will appear in the selected shape (Figure 120). You can apply a different background color by selecting the Background color option and choosing a color from the drop down list.
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For bitmap fills, select Bitmaps from the drop down list and then select your required
bitmap from the list of available bitmaps. Click on the OK button and the fill bitmap will appear in the selected shape (Figure 121). You can customize a large number of parameters. Refer to Working with bitmap fills on page 137 for additional information.
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Figure 122: Creating a new color To modify a color: 1) Select the color to modify from the list. 2) Enter the new values that define the color in RGB or CMYK. 3) Modify the name as required. 4) Click the Modify button. Alternatively, you can edit a color: 1) Click on the Edit button to open the Color Picker dialog (Figure 123). 2) Modify the color components as required using RGB, CMYK or HSB (Hue, Saturation, Brightness). 3) Click OK to exit the Color Picker dialog. 4) Click the Modify button on the Color dialog then click the OK button. The new color created is available only in the current document. If you want to use this color in other presentations, click the Save Color List icon and type a unique filename in the Save as dialog that opens. The saved colors list has the file extension of .soc. To use a previously saved colorlist , click the Load Color List icon open dialog. Click Open to load the saved color list into Impress. and select from the file
Tip
You can also add custom colors using Tools > Options > LibreOffice > Colors. This method makes the color available to all components of LibreOffice, whereas colors created using Format > Area > Colors are only available for Impress.
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Meaning
For Radial, Ellipsoid, Square and Rectangular gradients, modify these values to set the horizontal offset of the gradient center. For Radial, Ellipsoid, Square and Rectangular gradients, modify these values to set the vertical offset of the gradient center. For all the gradient types, specifies the angle of the gradient axis. Increase this value to make the gradient start further away from the border of the shape. The start color for the gradient. In the edit box below enter the intensity of the color: 0% corresponds to black, 100% to the full color. The end color for the gradient. In the edit box below enter the intensity of the color: 0% corresponds to black, 100% to the full color.
Figure 125: Creating a new hatching pattern Table 9: Properties of hatching patterns Property
Spacing Angle
Meaning
Determines the spacing between two lines of the pattern. As the value is changed the preview window is updated. Use the mini map below the numerical value to quickly set the angle formed by the line to multiples of 45 degrees. If the required angle is not a multiple of 45 degrees, just enter the desired value in the edit box. Set single, double or triple line for the style of the pattern. Use the list to select the color of the lines that will form the pattern.
The new hatching pattern created is available only in the current document. If you want to use this hatching pattern in other presentations, click the Save Hatches List icon and type a unique filename in the Save as dialog that opens. The saved hatches list has the file extension of .soh. To use a previously saved hatches list, click the Load Hatches List icon file open dialog. Click Open to load the saved hatches list into Impress. and select from the
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Figure 126: Advanced formatting for bitmap fill Table 10: Bitmap fill properties Property
Size Original Size Relative Size Width
Meaning
Select this box to retain the original size of the bitmap. To rescale the object, deselect Original and select Relative. The Width and Height edit boxes are enabled. When Relative is selected 100% means that the bitmap original width will be resized to occupy the whole fill area width, 50% means that the width of the bitmap will be half that of the fill area. When Relative is selected 100% means that the bitmap original height will be resized to occupy the whole fill area height, 50% means that the height of the bitmap will be half that of the fill area. Select from the map the place within the area to which the bitmap should be anchored. When this option is selected, the bitmap will be tiled to fill the area. The size of the bitmap used for the tiling is determined by the Size settings. When Tile is enabled, enter in this box the offset for the width of the bitmap in percentage values. 50% offset means that Impress will place the middle part of the bitmap at the anchor point and start tiling from there. This will have a similar effect to the X offset, but will work on the height of the bitmap. Stretches the bitmap to fill the whole area. Selecting this option disables all the size settings. If Tile is enabled, offsets the rows of tiled bitmaps by the percentage entered in the box so that two subsequent rows are not aligned.
Size Height
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Property
Offset Column
Meaning
If Tile is enabled, offsets the columns of tiled bitmaps by the percentage entered in the box so that two subsequent columns of bitmaps are not aligned.
The best way to acquire understanding of these parameters is to use them. Figure 127 shows some examples of bitmap fills and the parameters used.
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Note
The new bitmap created is available only in the current document. If you want to use this bitmap in other presentations, click the Save Bitmap List icon and type a unique filename in the Save as dialog that opens. The saved bitmap list has the file extension of .sob. To use a previously saved bitmap list, click the Load Bitmap List icon open dialog. Click Open to load the saved bitmap list into Impress. and select from the file
Formatting shadows
Shadowing can be applied to lines, shapes and text. To quickly apply a shadow to a line or shape only, first select the line or shape and then click on the Shadow icon in the Line and Filling toolbar. The shadow applied using this method cannot be customized and is set to default settings. To apply a shadow to a line, shape or text, first select the object and then select Format > Area to open the Area dialog. Click on the Shadow tab to open the Shadow page (Figure 129). This will allow you to set the following properties for the shadow.
Position: selects the point that determines the direction in which the shadow is cast. Distance: determines the distance between the object and the shadow. Color: sets the color of the shadow. Transparency: determines the amount of transparency for the shadow.
An alternative method for using shadows is to apply a style that uses a shadow See Working with graphic styles on page 146 for additional information on using styles.
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Transparency formatting
Transparency is applicable to objects as well as shadows. To apply transparency to lines, refer to Formatting lines on page 124; for shadows, refer to Formatting shadows on page 140. To apply transparency to objects, select the object and then select Format > Area to open the Area dialog. Click on the Transparency tab to open the Transparency page shown (Figure 130).
Figure 130: Setting object transparency The two types of transparency are available: uniform transparency and gradient transparency. To create a uniform transparency, select Transparency and then select the percentage of transparency required. To create a gradient transparency (so that the area becomes gradually transparent) select Gradient and then set the parameters of the gradient. Refer to Table 11 for a description of the properties. More information on gradient transparency, including an example of combining color gradient with gradient transparency, can be found in Advanced gradient controls on page 142.
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Meaning
For Radial, Ellipsoid, Quadratic and Square gradients, modify these values to set the horizontal offset of the gradient center. For Radial, Ellipsoid, Quadratic and Square gradients, modify these values to set the vertical offset of the gradient center. For Linear, Axial, Ellipsoid, Quadratic and Square gradient, specifies the angle of the gradient axis. Increase this value to make the gradient start further away from the border of the object. Value for the starting transparency gradient. 0% is fully opaque, 100% means fully transparent. Value for the ending transparency gradient. 0% is fully opaque, 100% means fully transparent.
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For linear gradients: move the square corresponding to the From color to change where
the gradient starts (border value). Move the square corresponding to the To color to change the orientation (angle value).
For axial gradients: you can move only the To color to change both the angle and border
properties of the gradient.
For radial gradients: move the From color to modify the border property to set the width of
the gradient circle. Move the To color to change the point where the gradient ends (Center X and Center Y values).
For ellipsoid gradients: move the From color to modify the border property to set the size
of the gradient ellipsoid. Move the To color to change the angle of the ellipsoid axis and the axis itself.
For square and rectangular gradients: move the From color to modify the border to set
the size of the gradient square or rectangle and the angle of the gradient shape. Move the To color to change the center of the gradient.
Moving the squares will have different effects depending on the type of gradient. For example, for a linear gradient, the start and end squares of the gradient will always be situated to either side of the center point of the object.
Note
Formatting text
Impress provides two dialogs related to text formatting: Format > Character for individual characters and Format > Text for whole words, sentences or paragraphs. To modify formatting such as font and font effects, select the text in the shape and then go to Format > Character or Format > Text. This section covers the formatting of the overall shape of text which is added to an object. For more information on formatting text, see Chapter 3, Adding and Formatting Text.
To add text to an object: 1) Select the object to which text will be added so that the selection handles are showing. 2) Double-click on the object and the cursor becomes an I-beam to indicate text mode. 3) Type your text. 4) When finished, click outside of the object or press Esc. To format the text in an object: 1) Select the object to which text was added. 2) Select Format > Text or right-click on the shape and select Text from the pop-up menu. The Text dialog is displayed (Figure 133). The Text section of the dialog offers several options in the form of checkboxes. Some of the options will be grayed out, depending on the object to which the text has been attached.
Fit width to text: expands the width of the object if the text is too long for it. Word wrap text in shape: starts a new line automatically when the edge of the object is
reached.
Fit height to text: expands the object height whenever it is smaller than the text (set by
default for lines).
Resize shape to fit text expands a custom object when the text inserted in the object is
too large.
Fit to frame: expands the text so that it fills all the available space. Adjust to contour: makes the text follow a curved line.
In the Spacing to borders section, specify the amount of space to be left between the borders of the object and the text. This is similar to setting indentation and spacing for paragraphs. The Text anchor section is used to anchor the text to a particular point within the object. The Full width option for anchoring centers the text within the object and the text will use the full width of the object before wrapping text.
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Text animation
The Text Animation dialog (Figure 134) adds animation effects to the text. Select one of four options from the drop down list. The animation direction of the effect, where applicable, is selected using one of the four arrow buttons to the right. The available effects are:
No animation: default setting. Blink: the text will blink on the screen. Scroll through: the text will move into the object and then out following the selected
direction.
Scroll back and forth: the text will move first in the selected direction, but will bounce back
at the object border.
Scroll in: the text will scroll in towards the given direction starting from the edge of the
object and stop in the center. The other properties that can be set are:
Start inside: when selected the animation will start from inside the object. Text visible when editing: select this option to see the text while editing. Animation cycles: select either Continuous or a specific number of cycles for the
animation.
Increment: sets the amount the animation moves in either Pixels or a specific distance.
Units of measurement depend on the settings in Tools > Options > LibreOffice Impress > General.
Delay: sets the delay time either Automatically or a specific length of time before the
animation starts. To see some of the animations in action, it is necessary to start the presentation. Press F9 or select Slide Show > Slide Show from the main menu. To return to the edit mode, press Esc.
Formatting connectors
Connectors are lines that join two shapes and always start from or finish at a glue point on an object. Refer to Chapter 5, Managing Graphic Objects, for a description of the use of connectors.
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Right-click on the connector line and select Connector from the pop up menu. Select Format > Styles and Formatting or press the F11 key, then select Connector >
Modify. Both methods open the Connector dialog (Figure 135) where you can set the properties of the connectors.
Type: sets the type of connector - Standard (default), Line, Straight, and Curved. Line skew: used where multiple connectors overlap to set the distance between the lines.
You can customize the distance between four different lines.
Line spacing: used to set the horizontal and vertical space between the connector and the
object at each end of the connector.
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If you use Impress frequently, a library of well-defined graphics styles is an invaluable tool for speeding up the process of formatting your work according to your taste or any style guidelines you may need to follow (company colors, fonts and so on). Click on the Graphic Styles icon on the Styles and Formatting dialog (Figure 136) to access graphic styles. If the dialog is not open, press the F11 key, or click on the Styles and Formatting icon on the formatting toolbar, or select Format > Styles and Formatting from the menu bar.
Using the Style and Formatting dialog From a selection Creating new graphic style using the Style and Formatting dialog
Click on the Graphics Styles icon 1) 2) 3) 4) at the top of the Styles and Formatting window. To link a new style with an existing style: Select the style you want to use in the Styles and Formatting dialog (Figure 136). Right click and select New to open the Graphic Styles dialog (Figure 137). Give your new graphic style a memorable file name. Use the various tabs and text boxes in the Graphics Styles dialog to format and categorize your new style. 5) Click on the OK button when finished to save your new graphic style.
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The Graphics Styles dialog consists of several pages that may be grouped as follows:
Organizer page contains a summary of the style and its hierarchical position. Font, Font Effects, Indents & Spacing, Alignment, Tabs and Asian typography pages set the
properties of the text inserted in a text box or in an graphic object.
Dimensioning page is used to set the style of dimension lines. Text, Text Animation, Connector, Line, Area, Shadowing, and Transparency pages
determine the formatting of a graphic object and are discussed elsewhere in this chapter.
When styles are linked, changing the font for example will change the font in all linked styles. Sometimes this is exactly what you want; at other times you do not want the changes to apply to all linked styles. It pays to plan ahead.
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Tip
Select the object to which you want to apply a graphic style and double-click on the name
of the style you want to apply.
and the mouse pointer changes to this icon. Position the icon on the graphic object to be styled and click the mouse button. This mode remains active until you turn it off, so you can apply the same style to several objects. To quit Fill Format mode, click the Fill Format mode icon again or press the Esc key. Fill Format action. Be careful not to accidentally right-click and thus undo actions you want to keep.
At the bottom of the Styles and Formatting window is a drop-down list. You can choose to show all styles or groups of styles such as applied styles or (in the case of graphics styles) custom styles.
When Fill Format mode is active, a right-click anywhere in the document cancels the last
Tip
To delete custom styles, right-click on them (one at a time) in the Styles and Formatting window and click Delete on the pop-up menu. Click Yes in the message box that pops up.
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OLE objects
Object Linking and Embedding (OLE) is a software technology that allows embedding and linking of the following types of files or documents into an Impress presentation. The major benefit of using OLE objects is that it provides a quick and easy method of editing the object using tools from the software used to create the object.
LibreOffice spreadsheets LibreOffice harts LibreOffice drawings LibreOffice formula LibreOffice text
These file types can all be created using the various modules included in LibreOffice software. Two types of OLE objects can be created: new and from a file.
Figure 141: Inserting a new OLE object 4) Select the type of OLE object you want to create and then click OK. 5) A new OLE object is inserted in the center of the slide in edit mode. The toolbars displayed in Impress will change providing the necessary tools for you to create the new OLE object.
For computers operating Microsoft Windows there is an additional option of Further objects. Clicking on this option opens an Insert Object dialog allowing you to create an OLE object using other software that is compatible with OLE. This option is available for new OLE objects and OLE objects from a file.
Note
Figure 142: Inserting a spreadsheet file To insert a file into your presentation as an OLE object: 1) Go to the slide where you want to insert the spreadsheet. 2) Choose Insert > Object > OLE Object from the menu bar. 3) On the Insert OLE Object dialog box, select Create from file . The dialog box changes to show a File text box (Figure 142). 4) Click Search.and the Open dialog box is displayed. 5) Locate the file you want to insert and click on Open. 6) Select the Link to file option if you wish to insert the file as a live link so that any changes made are synchronized in both the original file and your presentation. 7) Click on OK to insert the file as an OLE object.
Spreadsheets
To include a spreadsheet in an Impress slide, you can either insert an existing spreadsheet file or insert a new spreadsheet as an OLE object. See OLE objects on page 152 for more information. Embedding a spreadsheet into Impress includes most of the functionality of a Calc spreadsheet and is therefore capable of performing complex calculations and data analysis. However, if you plan to use complex data or formulas, it is better to perform complex operations in a separate Calc spreadsheet and use Impress only to display the embedded spreadsheet with the results. You maybe tempted to use spreadsheets in Impress for creating complex tables or presenting data in a tabular format. However, the Table Design feature (described in Chapter 3) is often more suitable and faster, depending on the complexity of your data. The entire spreadsheet is inserted into your slide. If the spreadsheet contains more than one sheet and the one you want is not visible, double-click the spreadsheet and then select a different sheet from the row of sheet tabs at the bottom.
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Editing a spreadsheet
When a spreadsheet is inserted in slide, it is in edit mode ready for inserting or modifying data or modifying the format (Figure 143). Note the active cell and the small resizing handles on the border. See Entering data on page 155 and Formatting spreadsheet cells on page 156 for more information. When editing a spreadsheet, some of the toolbars change so that you can easily edit the spreadsheet (Figure 144). One of the most important changes is the presence of the Formula toolbar, just below the Formatting toolbar. The Formula toolbar contains (from left to right):
The active cell reference or the name of the selected range The Formula Wizard button The Sum and Function buttons or the Cancel and Accept buttons (depending on the
contents of the cell)
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Note
Even if you have many sheets in your embedded spreadsheet, only one sheet - the one which is active when leaving the spreadsheet edit mode - is shown on the slide.
Each sheet is organized into cells. Cells are the elementary units of the spreadsheet. They are identified by a row number (shown on the left hand side) and a column letter (shown in the top row). For example, the top left cell is identified as A1, while the third cell in the second row is C2. All data elements, whether text, numbers or formulas, are entered into a cell.
Use the arrow keys. Left-click with the mouse on the desired cell. Use the combinations Enter and Shift+Enter to move one cell down or one cell up
respectively; Tab key and Shift+Tab key to move one cell to the right or to the left respectively. Other keyboard shortcuts are available to move quickly to certain cells of the spreadsheet. Refer to Chapter 5, Getting Started with Calc, in the Getting Started guide for further information.
Entering data
Keyboard input into a cell can only be done when the cell is active. An active cell is identified by a thick border. The cell reference (or coordinates) is also shown on the left hand end of the formula toolbar. To insert data, first select the cell to make it active, then start typing . Note that the input is also added to the main part of the formula toolbar where it may be easier to read. Impress will try to automatically recognize the type of contents (text, number, date, time, and so on) entered into a cell and apply default formatting to it. Note how the formula toolbar icons change according to the type of input, displaying Accept ( ) and Reject ( ) icons whenever the input is not a formula. Use Accept to confirm an input made in a cell or simply select a different cell, or press the Enter key.
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Figure 145: Formatting cells in a spreadsheet If Impress wrongly recognizes the type of input, select the cell then change format using Format > Cells in the main menu bar, or right-click on the cell and choose Format Cells from the pop-up menu to open the Format Cells dialog (Figure 145).
Sometimes it is useful to treat numbers as text (for example, telephone numbers) and to prevent Impress from removing the leading zeros or right align them in a cell. To force Impress to treat the input as text, type a single quotation mark (') before entering the number.
Tip
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Tip
You can also click on the first cell in the range, hold down the Shift key, and click in the cell in the opposite corner. Refer to Chapter 5, Getting Started with Calc, in the Getting Started book for further information on selecting ranges of cells.
Some shortcuts are very useful to speed up selection and are listed below:
To select the whole visible sheet, click on the blank cell between the row and column
indexes, or press Control+A.
To select a column, click on the column index at the top of the spreadsheet. To select a row, click on the row index on the left hand side of the spreadsheet.
Once a range is selected, you can modify the formatting, such as font size, alignment (including vertical alignment), font color, number formats, borders, background and so on. To access these settings, choose Format > Cells from the main menu bar or right-click and choose Format Cells from the pop-up menu to open the Format Cells dialog (Figure 145). If the text does not fit the width of the cell, you can increase the width by hovering the mouse over the line separating two columns in the header row until the mouse cursor changes to a doubleheaded arrow; then click the left button and drag the separating line to the new position. A similar procedure can be used to modify the height of a cell (or group of cells). To insert rows and columns in a spreadsheet, use the Insert menu or right-click on the row and column headers and select the appropriate option from the pop-up menu. To merge multiple cells, select the cells to be merged and select Format > Merge cells from the main menu bar. To split a group of cells, select the group and deselect Format > Merge Cells (which will now have a checkmark next to it). When you are satisfied with the formatting and the appearance of the table, exit edit mode by clicking outside the spreadsheet area. Note that Impress will display exactly the section of the spreadsheet that was on the screen before leaving edit mode. This allows you to hide additional data from view, but it may cause the apparent loss of rows and columns. Therefore, take care that the desired part of the spreadsheet is showing on the screen before leaving edit mode.
Tip
To get back into edit mode, right click and select Edit.
Charts
The use of charts is described in detail in Chapter 3, Creating Charts and Graphs, of the Calc Guide. You can insert a chart to your presentation using the tools within Impress or as an OLE object. See OLE objects on page 152 for more information on inserting a chart as an OLE object. To insert a chart using Impress tools, select the Insert Chart icon on the slide layout (Figure 146), or use Insert > Chart, or click the Insert Chart icon on the Standard toolbar. A chart appears containing sample data (Figure 147). To enter your own data into the chart, see Entering chart data on page 160.
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Figure 148: Chart Type dialog showing two-dimensional charts 5) Choose the chart characteristics you want, and then click OK. The Chart Type dialog box closes and you return to the edit window. Now you can continue to format the chart, add data to the chart, or click outside the chart to return to normal view.
Chart types
The following summary of the chart types available will help you choose a type suitable for your data. For more detail, see Chapter 3, Creating Charts and Graphs, in the Calc Guide. Column, bar, pie and area charts are available in 2D and 3D types. Column charts Column charts displays data that shows trends over time. They are best for charts that have a relatively small number of data points (for large time series, a line chart would be better.) This is the default chart type. Bar charts Bar charts give an immediate visual impact for data comparison where time is not important, such as comparing the popularity of products in a marketplace. Pie charts Pie charts give a comparison of proportions, for example, comparisons of departmental spending: what the department spent on different items or what different departments spent. They work best with a small range of values, for example six or less; more than this and the visual impact begins to fade. Area charts Area charts are versions of line or column charts. They are useful where you wish to emphasize volume of change. Area charts have a greater visual impact than a line chart, but the data you use will make a difference. You may need to use transparency values in an area chart. Line charts Line charts are time series with a progression. Ideal for raw data and useful for charts with data showing trends or changes over time where you want to emphasize continuity. On line charts,
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the x-axis is ideal for representing time series data. 3D lines confuse the viewer, so just using a thicker line often works better. Scatter or XY charts Scatter charts are great for visualizing data that you have not had time to analyze and may be best for data where you have a constant value for comparison: for example weather data, reactions under different acidity levels, conditions at altitude, or any data which matches two numeric series. The x-axis usually plots the independent variable or control parameter (often a time series). Bubble charts Bubble charts are used to represent three variables: two identify the position of the center of a bubble on a Cartesian graph, while the third variable indicates the radius of the bubble. Net charts Net charts are similar to polar or radar graphs and are useful for comparing data not in time series, but show different circumstances, such as variables in a scientific experiment. The poles of the net chart are the y-axes of other charts. Generally, between three and eight axes are best; any more and this type of chart becomes confusing. Stock charts Stock charts are specialized column graphs specifically for stocks and shares. You can choose traditional lines, candlestick, and two-column charts. The data required for these charts is specialized with series for opening price, closing price, and high and low prices. The x-axis represents a time series. Column and line charts Column and line charts are a combination of two other chart types. It is useful for combining two distinct, but related data series, for example sales over time (column) and the profit margin trends (line).
Tip
If you drag the Data Table dialog box so that your chart is visible, you can then immediately see the results of each change after clicking in a different cell.
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Entering data
Type or paste information into the cells within the desired rows and columns to enter data into the Data Table dialog. You can use the icons in the top left corner for large-scale editing:
The three Insert icons insert rows, column (series) and text columns. The two Delete icons remove a selected row or column (series) with its data. The two Move icons move the contents of the selected column to the right, or the contents
of the selected row down.
Formatting a chart
The format of your selected chart can be changed by clicking on Format in the main menu bar (Figure 151) where you can select several options to change the format of your chart. The formatting options available will depend on which part of your chart has been selected and are as follows:
Format Selection opens a dialog where you can specify area fill, borders, transparency,
characters, font effects, and position of the selected element of the chart.
Position and Size opens the Position and Size dialog (see Resizing and moving a chart). Arrangement provides two choices: Bring Forward and Send Backward, only one may be
active for specific items. Use these choices to arrange overlapping data series.
Title formats the titles of the chart and its axes. Legend formats the location, borders, background, and type of the legend. Axis formats the lines that create the chart as well as the font of the text that appears on
both the X and Y axes.
Grid formats the lines that create a grid for the chart.
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Chart Wall, Chart Floor, and Chart Area are described in the following sections. Chart Type changes what kind of chart is displayed and whether it is 2D or 3D. 3D View formats the various viewing angles of 3D chart. Note
Chart Floor and 3D View are available only for 3D charts. These options are unavailable (grayed out) if a 2D chart is selected.
A chart has two main areas: the chart wall and the chart area. These control different settings and attributes for the chart. Knowing the difference is helpful when formatting a chart.
Chart wall contains the graphic of the chart displaying the data. Chart area is the area surrounding the chart graphic. The (optional) chart title and the
legend (key) are in the chart area.
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Note
Format > Chart Floor is only available for 3D charts and has the same formatting options as Chart Area and Chart Wall.
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Tip
You can resize the chart using its square resizing handles (Shift + Click, then drag a corner handle to maintain proportions). However, you cannot resize the title or key.
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Tip
To insert media clips directly from the Gallery: 1) If the Gallery is not already open, choose Tools > Gallery from the menu bar. 2) Browse to a theme containing media files (for example Sounds). 3) Click on the movie or sound to be inserted and drag it into the slide area.
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Figure 156: Media playback toolbar The Media Playback toolbar (Figure 156) is automatically opened when a media file is selected. The default position of the toolbar is at the bottom of the screen, just above the Drawing toolbar. However, this toolbar can be undocked from its fixed position and allowed to float on screen. If the toolbar does not open, select View > Toolbars > Media Playback. The Media Playback toolbar contains the following tools from left to right:
Movie and Sound: opens the Insert Movie and Sound dialog where you can select a
media file to be inserted.
Play, Pause, Stop: controls media playback. Repeat: if pressed, media will continuously repeat playing until this tool is de-selected. Playback slider: selects the position within the media file. Timer: displays current position of the media clip/length of media file. Mute: when selected, the sound will be suppressed. Volume slider: adjusts the volume of the media file. Scaling drop-down menu: (only available for movies) allows scaling of the movie clip.
The movie will start playing as soon as the slide is shown during the presentation. Note that Impress will only link the media clip, not embed it. Therefore if the presentation is moved to a different computer, the link will be broken and the media clip will not play. To prevent this from happening: 1) Place the media file which is to be included in the presentation in the same folder where the presentation is stored. 2) Insert the media file in the presentation. 3) Send both the presentation and the the media file to the computer which is to be used for the presentation and place both files in the same folder on that computer. Impress has a media player to allow previewing of media files that are to be inserted into a presentation. To open it select Tools > Media Player and its toolbar is the same as that of the Media Playback toolbar (Figure 156).
Formulas
Use Insert > Object > Formula to create a Math object in a slide. A formula can also be included into a presentation as an OLE object; see OLE objects on page 152 for more information. When editing a formula, the Math menu becomes available to allow you to create or edit a formula.. Care should be taken about the font sizes used to make them compatible with the font size used in the presentation. To change the font attributes of the Math object, select Format > Font Size from the main menu bar. To change the font type, select Format > Fonts from the main menu bar. For additional information on how to create formulas, refer to Chapter 9, Getting Started with Math, in the Getting Started guide, or the Math Guide.
Note
Unlike formulas in Writer, a formula in Impress is treated as an object; therefore it will not be automatically aligned with the rest of the text. The formula can be however moved around (but not resized) like any other object.
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Introduction
This chapter describes how to add new slides to the presentation and how to format slides. It also explains how to format both the Notes and Handouts views. Notes are generally used as prompts for the person giving the presentation. Handouts are normally used for providing a printout of the slides to your audience. Two pop-up menus are available and useful when performing the operations on slides. One slide pop-up menu is displayed by right-clicking on a slide in Normal view and then selecting Slide (Figure 157). The other slide pop-up menu is accessed by right-clicking on a slide thumbnail in the Slides pane (Figure 158).
In Normal, Outline, or Slide Sorter view, select Insert > Slide on the main menu bar. In Normal, Outline, or Notes view, right-click on the Slides pane and select New Slide from
the pop-up menu.
In Slide Sorter view, right click in the main work area and select New Slide from the pop-up
menu.
In Normal view, right-click in the main work area and select Slide > New Slide.
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The new slide is inserted after the current slide or in the position where the mouse was clicked. If multiple slide masters are used in the presentation, the new slide will apply the master of the previous slide in the sequence.
Using Insert > File. With this method, you can optionally link the slides instead of copying.
This embeds the file into your presentation using OLE. See Chapter 7 Including Spreadsheets, Charts, and Other Objects of this guide for more information on OLE.
Copying and pasting. Dragging and dropping to copy or move slides. Inserting from a file
Figure 159: Inserting slides from a file 1) In Normal view, select the slide after which you want to insert the new slide, then choose Insert > File from the menu bar. 2) In the file browser, locate the file containing the slide that you want to insert and click Insert. 3) In the Insert Slides/Objects dialog (Figure 159), click the small triangular icon next to the filename to list the slides. 4) Select the slides that you want to insert into your presentation. 5) If required, select the Link option to embed the slides as OLE objects. 6) Click OK. The slides are inserted after the selected slide in the presentation.
Tip
Figure 159 shows the importance of giving descriptive names to slides in a presentation. Refer to Renaming a slide on page 172 for more information.
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3) Select the slides you require and then select Edit > Copy on the main menu, or click on the Copy icon on the main toolbar, or press Control+C (Cmd+C in Mac OS). 4) Change to the presentation where you want to paste the slides and select View > Normal. 5) Select the slide where you want the copied slides to follow. 6) Select Edit > Paste on the main menu, or click the Paste icon press Control+V (Cmd+V in Mac OS). on the main toolbar, or
Duplicating a slide
Duplicating a slide is an easy way to add slides if you want a new slide to inherit formatting, layout and animations from a selected slide. To duplicate a slide: 1) Go to Normal view either by clicking on the Normal tab in the Workspace pane or selecting View > Normal from the main menu. 2) Make sure that the slide to be duplicated is on the Workspace pane. 3) Select Insert > Duplicate Slide from the main menu. The duplicated slide is inserted after the original slide and displayed in the Workspace pane.
Duplicating a slide is a good way of preventing slides being shown with too much information making it difficult for your audience to understand. If a slide becomes crowded with information, try duplicating a busy slide then split the information points over two or more slides. All the formatting, backgrounds, and so on will be preserved in each duplicated slide.
Tip
Renaming a slide
To rename a slide, do one of the following: 1) Right-click on the slide thumbnail in the Slides pane or in the Workspace pane and select Slide > Rename Slide from the pop-up menu. 2) In Slide Sorter view, right-click on the slide and select Rename Slide from the pop-up menu. 3) In the Rename Slide dialog (Figure 160), type a new name for the slide and click OK.
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Expanding a slide
Occasionally you may have a slide with too many points to fit in the space available. Instead of reducing the font size or using other methods to squeeze more text into the space, it is better to subdivide the contents of the slide into two or more slides. As mentioned in Duplicating a slide on page 172, you can duplicate the slide and manually split the points. Alternatively the contents of a slide can be expanded as follows: 1) If necessary, duplicate the slide in case of error and you want to redo expansion of the slide. 2) Select Insert > Expand Slide from the main menu to create a new slide for each highest level of the outline. The outline text becomes the title of each new slide. Outline points below the top level on the original slide are moved up one level in the new slides. 3) If required, repeat steps 2 and 3 on any slide where level 2 entries of the outline exist, to expand those as well. Figure 161 shows a slide with an outline that has been expanded using the Expand Slide command. Each expanded slide has been given the slide title of each of the second level points on the original slide.
Caution
For the Expand command to work, ensure that the slide layout contains only one text AutoLayout box. If the layout of the slide is not suitable for expansion, the menu item is grayed out.
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Deleting a slide
To delete a slide, use any of the following methods:
In Normal, Outline or Slide Sorter view, select a slide and then select Edit > Delete Slide in
the main menu or press the Delete key.
In the Slides Pane select a slide and then right-click on the slide. Select Delete Slide from
the pop-up menu or press the Delete key.
In Normal view, right-click on the slide in the Workspace pane and then select Slide >
Delete Slide from the pop-up menu.
When working in the Slide sorter view (View > Slide sorter) it is possible to delete multiple slides simultaneously by selecting them with the mouse and pressing the Delete key.
Tip
Send an outline from Writer to Impress to create a new presentation. Send an auto-abstract from Writer to Impress to create a new presentation. Copying and pasting the outline from Writer to Impress to add to an existing presentation or
after creating a blank presentation.
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Figure 164: Choosing outline levels for AutoAbstract 2) Select the number of outline levels to be copied to the presentation in Included outline levels. For example, if you choose four levels, all paragraphs formatted with heading levels 1 to 4 are included, along with the number of paragraphs specified in Paragraphs per level. 3) The new presentation opens in Impress Outline view. Click on the Normal tab to populate the slides in the Slides pane. 4) If an outline has too many points to fit on one slide, expand the slide
Tip
It may be useful to open the Style and Formatting window of the Presentation styles page to track the outline level of each item.
Modifying slides
Use slide masters to give your presentation a professional look and to avoid manually modifying the formatting of each individual slide. Multiple slide masters can be used in a single presentation to provide the same look for groups of slides and avoid modifying the formatting of each individual slide in a group of slides. See Chapter 2 Slide Masters, Styles, and Templates of this guide for details about using slide masters.
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Note
1) To start, click the Normal tab in the Workspace pane or select View > Normal in the main menu. 2) Select Format > Page from the main menu, or right-click on the slide and choose Slide > Page Setup to open the Page Setup dialog (Figure 165). The Page tab has three sections: Paper format, Margins, and Layout settings. Changing these settings affects all slides in the presentation. In Paper format, select the preferred format from the drop-down list. The dimensions change automatically when a standard format is selected. The drop-down list contains selections for displaying the slides as well as printing them on paper. The default values for the screen settings are for a screen presentation with 4:3 ratio. If your computer uses a wide-screen monitor, you can manually adjust the width and height to fit a widescreen format. In Margins, change the spacing between the edges of the page and the contents of the slide. In Layout settings, select the page number format from the Format drop-down list. To allow resizing of slide objects and fonts to fit the selected paper format size, select the Fit object to paper format checkbox.
Printing slides
You can also select the orientation of the slide or paper (portrait or landscape) and the paper tray to be used. Note that in Impress you can only specify one printer tray for when printing pages (slides). However, you can specify different printer trays for printing all the slides, notes, and
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handouts on different printing media by changing the setting in the Page Setup dialog before printing. This is useful if, for example, you want to print slides on transparencies and handouts on paper. For more about printing presentations, see Chapter 10 Printing, E-mailing, Exporting, and Saving Slide Shows of this guide.
Tip
For easy maintenance it is recommended that slide masters are used to modify the slide backgrounds by creating additional slide masters as required.
Note
Applying a background to individual slides is no different from filling the area of a shape. See Chapter 6 Formatting Graphic Objects of this guide for more information.
To change the background for a slide: 1) Switch to Normal view by clicking the Normal tab in the Workspace pane or select View > Normal on the main menu. 2) Select the slide you want to change. 3) Select Format > Page from the main menu, or right-click and select Slide > Page Setup to open the Page Setup dialog (Figure 165). Choose the Background tab. 4) Follow the instructions in Formatting areas Chapter 6 Formatting Graphic Objects of this guide. 5) Click OK to save the changes. A pop-up message asks if you want to change the background on all slides. To change only the selected slide, click No. If you press Yes, Impress will apply the new background to all the slides used in the presentation.
Note
If these layouts do not fit the presentation style, the elements can be rearranged on an individual slide and duplicated as often as needed by copying to another presentation or saving it as a template. All the techniques in Chapter 3 Adding and Formatting Text of this guide for working with text boxes can be applied to the title and auto layout text elements of the slide. The placeholder for images can be moved and resized, see Chapter 4 Adding and Formatting Pictures of this guide. Chapter 7 Including Spreadsheets, Charts, and Other Objects of this guide describes how to include and modify spreadsheets, charts, and other objects.
Adding comments
When creating a presentation in a collaborative environment, it is often useful to add comments to the presentation for the benefit of the other people working on the presentation. To add a comment, switch to Normal view and select the slide where you want the comment to appear. Select Insert > Comment from the main menu to display a comment box (Figure 167) in the top left corner of the slide. Once you are finished typing your comment you can close the comment box by clicking anywhere outside the comment box.
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Figure 167: Adding comments Each comment is color coded and marked with the initials of the author as well as a sequential number and is shown in the top left corner of the slide in Normal view. Clicking on a comment box displays the full text of the comment. The size of the comments box is fixed and scroll bars appear when needed.
Figure 168: Comments drop down list A limited set of options available for formatting a comment can be accessed by right-clicking on the comment box. Use the pop-up menu to apply one or more font attributes (bold, italic, underline, strikethrough) or paste contents that have been copied to the clipboard. Use the comment drop down list (Figure 168) to delete the current comment, delete all the comments from the author of the selected comment, or delete all the comments in the presentation. If the comment you opened was created by a different author the comment drop down list also displays the option to reply to the comment.
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Note
If you regularly give presentations in public using a projector, you may want to consider installing the Presenter Console, an extension that allows you to display on your screen the slide notes, the next slide, and other useful information while only the slide is shown through the projector. The extension may be installed with your copy of LibreOffice, or you can download it from http://extensions.libreoffice.org/.
Formatting notes
It is highly recommended to use the Notes Master and the Notes Presentation style to format the appearance of notes, rather than formatting them for each slide individually. All the formatting guidelines given in this section can be applied to either the Notes Master or to the Notes Presentation style. To open the Notes Master, choose View > Master > Notes Master from the main menu (Figure 170).
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Header area Date and Time area Footer area Slide or page number area
To customize these fields, proceed as follows: 1) Switch to Notes view from the corresponding tab in the work area or by selecting View > Notes Page from the main menu, or open the Notes Master by going to View > Master > Notes Master (Figure 170) on the main menu. 2) Choose Insert > Date and Time for the date and time. Choose between Fixed to enter the date and time that should be displayed or Variable to enter the date and time of the slide creation. Use the two drop-down menus to select the format of the date and the language. 3) Choose Insert > Page Number from the main menu to display the Header and Footer dialog. Select the Notes and Handouts tab (Figure 172). 4) Select the checkboxes to activate the corresponding areas. For the Header and Footer, type the text in the edit fields. If the Page number checkbox is activated, to format the type of numbering refer to Formatting the Notes page on page 182. 5) Click the Apply to All button to save these settings and close the dialog.
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Text formatting
When text is inserted in the Notes text box, it is automatically formatted using the predefined Notes style that you can find in the Presentation styles. The best way to format the notes text is to modify this style to suit your needs. Refer to Chapter 2 Slide Masters, Styles, and Templates of this guide for more information. If manual formatting is required, for example to highlight a particular section of the notes, refer to Chapter 3 Adding and Formatting Text of this guide for more information.
Move the text box and the slide image around the page Resize the slide image and text box (only from the Slide Master view). Add other text boxes to the page.
Printing notes
1) Choose File > Print from the main menu. 2) On the Print dialog, in the Print section (Figure 173) of the General tab, select Notes from the Document list. 3) Make any other necessary changes and click OK to print. For more information on printing slides, notes, and handouts, see Chapter 10 Printing, E-mailing, Exporting, and Saving Slide Shows of this guide.
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Note
If your presentation has 10 slides, the PDF contains 20 pages: 10 pages of individual slides, followed by 10 pages with notes formatted for paper. If you want only the Notes pages, you will need to use some other program to remove the unwanted pages of slides from the PDF.
Creating handouts
A handout is a special view of the presentation suitable for printing and distribution to the audience. Each handout page contains from one to nine thumbnails of the slides in the presentation so that the audience can follow what is presented as well as use it as reference. This section explains how to customize the handout page. Note that the Handout view consists of only one page regardless of the number of slides in the presentation or the number of pages of slides that will be printed.
Tip
As for any other toolbar, you can undock the Task pane by holding down the Control key and double-clicking on an empty part of the pane.
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Figure 176: Layouts for handouts 3) In the Task pane select the Layouts tab (Figure 176). 4) Select the preferred layout and the main work area changes to reflect the selection.
Formatting handouts
You can format several aspects of the handout, from the page style to the elements that appear on the page. You cannot format individual handout pages; any changes apply to all handouts in the presentation file.
3) On the Page Setup dialog (Figure 171), set the paper size, orientation (portrait or landscape), margins, and other parameters. Click OK.
Header area Date and Time area Footer area Slide or page number area
The information in these areas does not show in Handout view, but it does appear correctly on the printed handouts.
Note
The way to access and customize these areas is the same as for the Notes and uses the same dialog. Refer to Setting automatic layout options on page 183 for more information.
Tip
Caution
Printing handouts
1) Choose File > Print from the main menu.
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2) On the General page of the Print dialog, in the Print section, select Handouts from the Document list (Figure 174). 3) Specify the number of slides per page and the order in which to print multiple slides. To select which slides to include in the handouts, in the Range and copies section of the General page, select Slides and specify the slide numbers to be included. For more information on printing slides, notes, and handouts, see Chapter 10 Printing, E-mailing, Exporting, and Saving Slide Shows of this guide.
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Which slides to show and in what sequence Whether to run the show automatically or manually Transitions between slides Animations on individual slides Interactions: what happens when you click a button or link
Most tasks associated with putting together a slide show are best done in Slide Sorter view. Choose View > Slide Sorter from the main menu or click the Slide Sorter tab at the top of the Workspace pane. All of your slides appear in the workspace; you may need to scroll to see them all.
Figure 178: Selecting slide show settings In the Range section, select which slides to include in the slide show:
All slides: includes all of the slides except for those marked Hidden (see Hiding slides on
page 192). Slides are shown in the sequence they occur in the file. To change the sequence, either rearrange the slides in the slide sorter or choose a custom slide show (see below).
From: starts the show at a slide other than the first. For example, you might have several
slides at the beginning that describe you and your company, but when you present this show to your work colleagues, you want to skip that introduction.
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Custom Slide Show: shows the slides in a different sequence that you have previously set
up. This setting is not available until you have set up a custom slide show (see Showing slides in a different order on page 192). You can set up as many different custom shows as you wish from one set of slides; they will appear in the drop-down list under this choice. In the Type section, select how the slides will be displayed:
Default: shows the slides full screen, without the LibreOffice program controls visible, and
exits the show after the last slide.
Window: runs the slide show in the LibreOffice program window and exits the show after
the last slide.
Auto: restarts the slide show after the last slide. A pause slide is displayed between the
last slide and the start slide. Press the Esc key to stop the show. In the box, specify the length of time before the show restarts. If you enter zero, the show restarts immediately without showing a pause slide. The Show Logo option shows the LibreOffice logo on the pause slide. In the Options section:
Mouse pointer visible: shows the mouse pointer during a slide show. If you do not have a
laser pointer or other device to highlight items of interest during the show, this can be useful.
Mouse pointer as pen: enables you to write or draw on slides during the presentation.
Anything you write with the pen is not saved when you exit the slide show. The color of the pen cannot be changed.
Navigator visible: displays the Navigator during the slide show. For more information on
the Navigator, see Chapter 1 Introducing Impress of this guide.
Animations allowed: displays all frames of animated GIF files during the slide show. If this
option is not selected, only the first frame of an animated GIF file is displayed. This has nothing to do with the slide animations described in Using slide animation effects on page 196.)
Change slides by clicking on background: advances to the next slide when you click on
the background of a slide. You can also press the spacebar on the keyboard to advance to the next slide.
Presentation always on top: prevents any other program window from appearing on top
of the presentation. In the Multiple displays section:
You can select which display to use for full screen slide show mode. Only available if the
current desktop is displayed on more than one monitor.
If the current desktop is displayed on only one monitor, or if the multiple-display feature is
not supported on the current system, you cannot select another display.
By default the primary display is used for slide show mode. Note
This multiple displays setting is not a property saved in the document, but is instead saved as a local setting in the user configuration. This means that if you open the presentation on a different computer the local settings are applied.
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Hiding slides
You may not want to show all of the slides in a particular slide show. You can either hide some of the slides or set up a custom slide show; whichever method suits your requirements. For example, you may have draft slides that you do not want to show until they are finished, or you may have some slides that contain information for yourself, but not your audience. To hide a slide: 1) In the Slides pane, or in Slide Sorter view, select the slides that you want to hide. 2) Click the Hide Slide icon on the Slide View toolbar (Figure 179), right-click and select Hide Slide from the context menu, or select Slide Show > Hide Slide on the main menu. The slide is now displayed greyed out to indicate that it is hidden (Figure 180). The slide is not deleted and remains in the file.
Figure 180: Slide 2 is hidden To show a hidden slide: 1) In the Slides pane, or in Slide Sorter view, select the hidden slides that you want to show. 2) Click the Show Slide icon on the Slide View toolbar (Figure 179), right-click and select Show Slide from the context menu, or select Slide Show > Show Slide on the main menu.
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Figure 182: Defining a custom slide show 2) Click on New and the the Define Custom Slide Show dialog opens (Figure 182). 3) Type a name for the new custom show in the Name text box. 4) In the Existing slides list, select the slides to include in the show. Click the >> button to include the slides in the Selected slides list. In Figure 182, the first three slides have been selected. 5) You can select and include several slides at the same time. Hold down the Shift key and click the first and last slide in a group to select that group, or hold down the Control key and click on individual slides to select them.
If you include several slides at the same time, they are added to the Selected slides list in the order they appear in your presentation regardless of the order in which you selected them. To put the selected slides in a different order, either select and include each slide individually or select a slide and drag it up or down in the selected slide list. You can also use the Slide Sorter view to rearrange the order of slides before making your selection.
Note
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Tip
Slides are added to the Selected slides list after whichever slide is currently highlighted in the list. By default, the last slide added is highlighted unless you have selected a different one. For example, in Figure 182, to add the slide Final Slide Example after the Default Example and before Shapes, make sure that Default Example is highlighted before moving Final Slide Example into Selected slides.
6) When you have finished arranging the order of the slides, click OK to save this custom show and return to the Custom Slide Shows dialog box. 7) To activate a custom show, select it in the list in the Custom Slide Shows dialog box and then select the Use Custom Slide Show option at the bottom.
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Tip
Tip
If you want most of the slides to have the same transition with a few different transitions, you may find it easier to apply one transition to all slides and then change only the ones you want to be different.
3) Select Automatically after in the Advance slide section. 4) Set a time and click the Apply to All Slides button. To vary the timing for some of the slides in your slide show: 1) Select Slide Show > Rehearse Timings from the main menu, or click the Rehearse Timings icon on the Slide Show toolbar. The slide show begins in full-screen mode, and a timer appears in the lower left-hand corner of the screen. 2) When you want to advance to the next slide, click the timer. To keep the default setting for this slide, click the slide, not the timer. 3) Continue until you have set the timing for all slides in your presentation. Impress records the display time for each slide. When you next look at the time set under Automatically after, you will see that the times have changed to match what you set when rehearsing. 4) To exit from the rehearsal, press the Escape key or right click on the slide and select End Show. If you want the whole presentation to auto-repeat, open the Slide Show dialog (Figure 178) by going to Slide Show > Slide Show Settings on the main menu. Click on Auto and then OK.
Caution
Do not click the Apply to all button; otherwise your selected sound will restart at every slide.
Note
The sound file is linked to a presentation rather than embedded; therefore if you plan to display the presentation on a different computer, remember that you also have to make the sound file available on the computer where the presentation will be played, and re-establish the link to the local sound file before starting the slideshow.
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Note
At present it is not possible to apply animation effects to the slide master elements. This means that if you want to display the items in a text box one by one, and use the same animation on more than one slide, you need to apply the effects to each slide, or alternatively copy the text box from one slide to another.
Figure 184: Custom Animation on Task pane 1) In the Tasks pane, select Custom Animation (Figure 184). 2) Click Add to open the Custom Animation dialog (Figure 185). 3) Select an effect from one of the tabbed pages of this dialog, and choose the speed or duration of that effect. 4) Select an animation to be applied from the Entrance page when an object is placed on the screen.
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Figure 185: Custom Animation dialog 5) Use the Emphasis page to apply a basic effect to an object, for example changing font color, or adding special effects such as blinking text. 6) Use the Exit page to apply an effect when an object leaves the screen. 7) If you want the object to move along a line or curve, select an animation from the Motion Paths page. An example of this type of animation is provided in Example: Setting up a motion path on page 200. 8) If required, change the speed of an effect from the Speed drop-down list before moving to another tabbed page. 9) Select Automatic preview if you want to see how the effect works with having to run the whole slide show. 10) Click OK to save the animation effects and return to the Custom Animation page on the Task pane. Here you can choose how to start the animation, change the overall speed, and apply some additional properties to the selected effect.
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4) On the Entrance page of the Custom Animation dialog select Fly In, change the Speed to Medium, and click OK. 5) The four animation effects set up are listed in the Custom Animation page (Figure 187). Step 2. Apply the Change Font Color effect to some items. Now the first three list items are going to change color when the following item appears on the slide. To do this: 1) Select the first three items on the slide (not in the animations list) and click Add in the Custom Animation pane. 2) Go to the Emphasis page of the Custom Animation dialog and select Change Font Color. Click OK to save this effect. 3) Notice that three new animations are listed at the bottom of the animations list, and the icon for type of effect is now is different from the icon for the first four effects (Figure 188). 4) You could, if you wish, select any of the last three items and choose a different color from the Font color list on the Custom Animation pane. 5) Use the Change order: up-arrow button to move each of the last three items up the list so that they are under the other item with the same name.
Figure 188: Second animation added Step 3. Change timing of some list items from With previous to On click. All of the items on the animations list (except for the two Point one items) are set to start at the same time as the previous item. However, it is best that when you click to make the next point appear the previous point is dimmed. Therefore to set the color change of the previous point and the entrance of the new point to run on mouse click simultaneously. 1) Select the color change animations and choose On click from the Start list, then select the entrance animations (except the first) and choose With Previous from the Start list. 2) Test this set of animations by clicking the Slide Show button.
line so that selection handles are displayed around it. When the selection handles are shown, you can move or resize the path the same way you would perform these operations on a graphic object.
Note
When moving a path, remember to also move the object on that path; otherwise the animation will start with a jump. Currently it is not possible to rotate a path.
If instead you want to modify the individual points on the line, select the Points icon from the Drawing toolbar while the path is selected. The Edit Points toolbar (Figure 189) is displayed; if not, select it from View > Toolbars > Edit Points. The number of icons available in the Edit Points toolbar will depend on the type of motion path and object selected.
Figure 189: Edit Points toolbar and icons Once a point is selected, you can add an additional point, delete it, move it and so on. For a detailed explanation on how to manipulate the points on a curve, see the Draw Guide. Once you are satisfied with the shape of the curve and its speed, click anywhere on the screen to deselect the object and continue normal editing. You can combine a motion path with other effects such as spinning or changing of size or colors to create dramatic effects.
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On the Effect page, you can select a sound to play, whether to dim or hide the object after animation, and (in the case of text objects) whether to animate the text all at once or word by word or letter by letter. On the Text Animation page of the Effect Options dialog (Figure 190), you can group text as one object, all paragraphs at once, or by first-level paragraphs (that is, one list item together with its sub-items, if any).
Figure 190: Text Animation page of Effect Options dialog On the Timing page of the Effect Options dialog (Figure 191) you to change the speed, delay, and other aspects of the timing of the effect.
Using interactions
Interactions are things that happen when you click on an object in a slide. They are typically used with buttons or images, but text objects can also have interactions. To apply an interaction to an object (or change an interaction applied to an object), right-click on the object and choose Interaction from the pop-up menu to open the Interaction dialog (Figure 192). Select an interaction from the Action at mouse click drop-down list. With some interactions the Interaction dialog changes to offer more options.
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Tip
A sound interaction can be also applied using the Effect Options dialog (Figure 186 on page 199).
Press F5. Click Slide Show > Slide Show on the main menu. Click the Slide Show icon on the Presentation toolbar or the Slide Sorter toolbar.
If the slide transition is Automatically after x seconds, let the slide show run by itself. If the slide transition is On mouse click, do one of the following to advance from one slide to the next.
Press the down arrow key, the right arrow key, or the Page Down key on the keyboard. Click the left mouse button. Press the Spacebar.
To go backwards through the show one slide at a time, press the up arrow key, the left arrow key, or the Page Up key. For more complex navigation, use the right-click menu (see Navigating using the right-click menu). Custom animations on a slide are run in the specified order when performing one of the above actions. When you advance past the last slide, the message Click to exit presentation... appears. Click the left mouse button or press any key to exit the presentation. To exit the slide show and return to the Impress workspace at any time, including at the end, press the Esc key.
Next: moves to the next slide in the defined sequence. Previous: moves to the previous slide in the defined sequence. Go to Slide: displays a submenu allowing to quickly navigate through the presentation.
Options on the submenu include First slide, Last Slide, or any slide in the show. This illustrates why giving the slides meaningful names, rather than leaving them at the default Slide 1, Slide 2, and so on, can be very helpful.
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Screen: displays a submenu with two options. Each option blanks the screen, showing it
as either all black or all white. This can be useful if you want to pause the show for awhile, perhaps during a break or to demonstrate something on another computer.
End Show: ends the presentation and returns you to the Impress workspace. This is the
same effect as pressing the Esc key.
Note
The Presenter Console works only on operating systems that support two displays, and only when two displays are connected (one may be the laptop display).
First view displays the current slide, including the effects, and the upcoming slide. Second view shows the notes for the speaker in large, scalable type, plus the current and
upcoming slide.
Third view is a slide sorter view with the slide thumbnails where you can select a thumbnail
to jump to a slide out of sequence.
Lastly, the presenter can display a set of help notes with navigational and other information.
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Introduction
This chapter provides information about printing, exporting, and e-mailing documents from LibreOffice Impress.
Quick printing
Click the Print File Directly icon on the Standard toolbar to send the entire document to the default printer defined for your computer.
You can change the action of the Print File Directly icon to send the document to the printer defined for the document instead of the default printer for the computer. Go to Tools > Options > Load/Save > General and select the Load printer settings with the document option.
Note
Controlling printing
Impress provides many options for printing a presentation: with multiple slides on one page, with a single slide per page, with notes, as an outline, with date and time, with page name, and more. For more control over printing a presentation, choose File > Print to display the Print dialog (Figure 193). The Print dialog has four tabs, from which you can choose a range of options, as described in the following sections.
Note
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The printer from the printers available. Which slides to print, the number of copies to print, and whether to collate multiple copies
using the Range and copies section.
Whether to print slides, notes, handouts, or an outline of the presentation using the
Document drop-down list in the Print section.
For handouts, how many slides per printed page and in what order (see Printing handouts,
notes, or outlines on page 209 for details). Click the Properties button to display a dialog (Figure 194) where you can choose portrait or landscape orientation, which paper tray to use, and the paper size to print on.
Figure 194: Properties dialog for General page in the Print dialog The Options page of the Print dialog provides other options for printing your presentation, as shown in Figure 195.
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Figure 197: Ranges and copies section of Print dialog To print an individual slide or several slides, do either of the following:
Open the Print dialog, select the Slides option in the Ranges and copies section, type the
slide number, and click Print. Multiple slides may be represented by a list (for example 1,3,7,11) or as a range (for example 1-4).
Select the slide in the Slides pane or the Slide Sorter view, then open the Print dialog and
select Selection in the Ranges and copies section, then click Print.
What to print in addition to the slides: Slide name, Date and time, and Hidden pages
(slides).
Whether to print in Original colors, Grayscale, or Black and white (on a color printer). What size to print slides.
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Handouts prints the slides in reduced size on the page, from one to nine slides per page.
The slides can be printed horizontally (landscape orientation) or vertically (portrait orientation) on the page.
Notes prints a single slide per page with any notes entered for that slide in Notes View. Outline prints the title and headings of each slide in outline format.
Figure 199: Printing handouts To print handouts, notes, or outlines: 1) Choose File > Print from the main menu. 2) In the Print section of the Print dialog, select the required option from the Document dropdown list. 3) For Handouts, you can then choose how many slides to print per page, and the order in which they are printed. 4) Click the Print button.
orientation of your document does not match the printer settings. See Chapter 11, Setting Up and Customizing Impress for details.
Printing a brochure
You can print a presentation with two slides on each side of a sheet of paper, arranged so that when the printed pages are folded in half, the slides are in the correct order to form a booklet or brochure. To print a brochure on a printer that can only print single sided pages: 1) Choose File > Print. 2) In the Print dialog, click Properties. 3) Check the printer is set to the same orientation (portrait or landscape) as specified in the page setup for your document. Usually the orientation does not matter, but it does for brochures. Click OK to return to the Print dialog. 4) Select the Page layout tab in the Print dialog (Figure 196 on page 208). 5) Select the Brochure option. 6) In the Page sides section, select Back sides / left pages option from the drop-down list. 7) Click the Print button. 8) Take the printed pages out of the printer, turn the pages over, and put them back into the printer in the correct orientation to print on the blank side. You may need to experiment a bit to find out what the correct arrangement is for your printer. 9) On the Print dialog, in the Page sides section, select Front sides / right pages option from the Include drop down box. Click the Print button. To print a brochure on a printer that can print double sided pages: 1) Choose File > Print. 2) In the Print dialog, click Properties. 3) Check the printer is set to the same orientation (portrait or landscape) as specified in the page setup for your document. Usually the orientation does not matter, but it does for brochures. Click OK to return to the Print dialog. 4) Select the Page layout tab in the Print dialog (Figure 196 on page 208). 5) Select the Brochure option. 6) In the Page sides section, select All pages option from the drop-down list. 7) Click the Print button.
Exporting to PDF
Impress can export presentations to PDF (Portable Document Format). This industry-standard file format for file viewing is ideal for sending the file to someone else to view using Adobe Reader or other PDF viewers.
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Pages: exports a range of slides. Use the format 3-6 for example to export a range of
pages. Use the format 7;9;11 for example to export several individual slides. You can also export a combination of slide ranges and single slides by using a format like 3-6;8;10;12.
JPEG compression: allows for varying degrees of quality. A setting of 90% tends to work
well with photographs (small file size, little perceptible loss).
Reduce image resolution: lower-DPI (dots per inch) images have lower quality. For
viewing on a computer screen generally a resolution of 72DPI (Windows) or 96DPI (GNU/Linux/Mac OS) is sufficient. For printing it is generally preferable to use at least 300DPI or 600DPI, depending on the capability of the printer. Higher DPI settings greatly increase the size of the exported file.
EPS (Encapsulated PostScript) images with embedded previews are exported only as previews. EPS images without embedded previews are exported as empty placeholders.
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General section Embed OpenDocument File: allows the PDF file to be exported containing two file formats: PDF and ODF. The PDF format allows the file to be opened using PDF viewers. The ODF format allows the file to be easily edited using LibreOffice.
PDF/A-1: this is an ISO standard for long-term preservation of documents. It embeds all
the information necessary for faithful reproduction (such as fonts) while preventing other elements, for example forms, security, and encryption. PDF tags are written. If you select PDF/A-1, the elements not allowed are grayed-out (not available).
Tagged PDF: a tagged PDF contains information about the structure of the documents
contents. This can help to display the document on devices with different screens and when using screen reader software. Some tags that are exported are table of contents, hyperlinks, and controls. This option can increase file sizes significantly.
Create PDF form - Submit format: select the format of submitting forms from within the
PDF file. This setting overrides the URL property control that you set in the document. There is only one common setting valid for the whole PDF document: PDF (sends the whole document), FDF (sends the control contents), HTML, and XML. Most often you will choose the PDF format.
Export bookmarks: exports slide names as bookmarks (a table of contents list displayed
by some PDF readers, including Adobe Reader).
Export comments: exports comments as PDF notes. Export notes pages: exports a set of Notes as pages after the set of slides. Export automatically inserted blank pages: not used in Impress and is normally grayed
out.
Embed standard fonts: normally the 14 standard PostScript fonts are not embedded in a
PDF file because PDF reader software already contains these fonts. However, you can choose to embed these fonts in all PDF documents created by LibreOffice to enhance display accuracy in PDF viewers. Font embedding may also be required by some printers.
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If you have Complex Text Layout enabled (in Tools > Options > Language settings > Languages), an additional selection is available under Continuous facing: First page is left. Normally, the first page is on the right when using the Continuous facing option.
Figure 202: User Interface page of PDF Options dialog Window options section Resize window to initial page. makes the PDF viewer window resize to fit the first page of the PDF.
Center window on screen. makes the PDF viewer window center on the computer screen. Open in full screen mode. makes the PDF viewer open full-screen instead of a window. Display document title. makes the PDF viewer display the document title in the title bar.
User interface options section Hide menubar. makes the PDF viewer hide the menu bar.
Hide toolbar. makes the PDF viewer hide the toolbar. Hide window controls. makes the PDF viewer hide all other window controls.
Transitions section Use transition effects: includes Impress slide transition effects as PDF effects. Bookmarks section All bookmark levels: displays all the bookmarks created in the presentation if Export bookmarks is selected on the General page.
Visible bookmark levels: selects how many heading levels are displayed as bookmarks if
Export bookmarks is selected on the General page.
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Figure 203: Links page of PDF Options dialog Export bookmarks as named destinations If you have defined Writer bookmarks, Impress or Draw slide names, or Calc sheet names, this option exports them as named destinations allowing web pages and PDF documents to link. Convert document references to PDF targets If you have defined links to other documents with OpenDocument extensions (such as .ODT, .ODS, and .ODP), this option converts the files name extensions to .PDF in the exported PDF document. Export URLs relative to file system If you have defined relative links in a document, this option exports those links to the PDF. Cross-document links Defines the behavior of links clicked in PDF files.
Note
Security settings are effective only if another PDF viewer respects the settings.
Creating a Set open password (Figure 205), the PDF can only be opened with the
password. Once opened, there are no restrictions on what the user can do with the document (for example, print, copy, or change it).
Creating a Set permission password (Figure 205), the PDF can be opened by anyone,
but its permissions can be restricted using the options in Figure 204. These permissions only become available when this password is set. These selections are self-explanatory.
With both of these passwords set, the PDF can only be opened with the correct password,
and its permissions can be restricted.
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Note
Saving in Flash format does not retain animation and slide transitions.
Using LibreOffice, you can export your Impress slide show as a Flash file in .swf format as follows: 1) Choose File > Export. 2) Select the location where you want the file saved and type a name for the file. 3) Under File Format, choose Macromedia Flash (SWF) (.swf) and click Save.
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Note
Saving as web pages (HTML format) does not retain animation and slide transitions.
Figure 206: HTML Export wizard selecting a design 1) Select File > Export and choose HTML Document as the file type. 2) If necessary, create a folder for the files, then give a name for the resulting HTML file and click Save. The HTML Export wizard opens (Figure 206). 3) Select a design for all of the pages, either from an existing design or by creating a new one. If you have not previously saved a design, the Existing Design choice is not available.
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4) Click Next to select the type of web pages to create (Figure 207). The available options will change depending on publication type selected.
1) Standard HTML: one page for each slide with navigation links to move from slide to slide.
2) 3) 4)
Standard HTML with frames: one page with a navigation bar on the left-hand side; uses slide title as navigation links. Click on links to display pages in right-hand side. Automatic: one page for each slide, with each page set with the refresh meta tag so a browser automatically cycles from one page to the next. WebCast: generates an ASP or Perl application to display the slides. Unfortunately LibreOffice has no direct support for PHP yet.
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5) Click on Next to decide how the images will be saved (PNG, GIF or JPG) and what resolution to use (Figure 208). When choosing a resolution, consider what the majority of your viewers may have. For example, if you use a high resolution, then a viewer with a medium-resolution monitor will have to scroll sideways to see the entire slide. 6) If Create title page was selected in step 4, supply the information for it on the next page that appears after clicking on Next (Figure 209). The title page contains name of the author, e-mail address and home page, along with any additional information you want to include. This page of the Wizard does not display if Create title page was not selected. 7) Click on Next to select the style of navigation buttons to use when moving from one page to another (Figure 210). If you do not choose a navigation style, LibreOffice will create a text navigator.
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8) Click on Next to select the color scheme for the web pages (Figure 211). Available schemes include the existing scheme for the presentation, one based upon browser colors, and a user-defined scheme. You can save a new scheme so that it will appear on the first page of the HTML export wizard. 9) Click Create to generate the HTML files. If this is a new design, a small dialog pops up (Figure 212). If you want to reuse this design, you can give it a name and save it. Otherwise, click Do Not Save.
E-mailing a presentation
LibreOffice provides several ways to quickly and easily send a presentation as an e-mail attachment in one of three formats: .ODP (OpenDocument Presentation, LibreOffice default format), .PPT (Microsoft PowerPoint format), or as a PDF file. To send the presentation in .ODP format: 1) Choose File > Send > Document as E-mail or File > Send > E-mail as OpenDocument Presentation. LibreOffice opens a new e-mail in your default e-mail program. The document is attached. 2) In your e-mail program, enter the recipient, subject and any text you want to add, then send the e-mail. If you select E-mail as Microsoft PowerPoint Presentation, LibreOffice first creates a .PPT file and then opens your e-mail program with the .PPT file attached. This .PPT file is not saved on your computer. Similarly, if you select E-mail as PDF, LibreOffice first creates a PDF using your default PDF settings (similar to using the Export Directly as PDF icon in the standard toolbar) and then opens your e-mail program with the .PDF file attached. This PDF file is not saved on your computer.
If you want to keep a copy of the .PPT or .PDF file as well as e-mailing it to someone, first save or export the presentation into the required format, then attach it to an e-mail in the usual way.
Tip
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the program can show you the public key information from the certificate. You can compare the public key with the public key that is published on the web site of the certificate authority. Whenever someone changes something in the document, this change breaks the digital signature. On Windows operating systems, the Windows features for validating a signature are used. On Solaris and Linux systems, files that are supplied by Thunderbird, Mozilla or Firefox are used. For a more detailed description of how to get and manage a certificate, and signature validation, see Using Digital Signatures in the LibreOffice Help. To sign a document: 1) Choose File > Digital Signatures. 2) If you have not saved the document since the last change, a message appears. Click Yes to save the file. 3) After saving, you see the Digital Signatures dialog box. Click Sign Document to add a public key to the document. 4) In the Select Certificate dialog, select your certificate and click OK. 5) You see again the Digital Signatures dialog box, where you can add more certificates if you want. Click OK to add the public key to the saved file. A signed document shows an icon certificate. in the status bar. You can double-click the icon to view the
Caution
There are some differences between OpenDocument (.odp) and PowerPoint (.ppt, .pptx) files in text and graphics formatting, animations, transitions, and fields. For best results, avoid using features that are not fully supported in both formats.
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Tip
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Note
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Print options
On the LibreOffice Print page, set the print options to suit your default printer and your most common printing method. You can change these settings at any time, either through the Options dialog or during the printing process (by clicking the Options button on the Print dialog). See Chapter 10, Printing, E-mailing, Exporting, and Saving Slide Shows for more information about the options available.
Color options
On the LibreOffice Colors page (Figure 216), you can specify colors used in LibreOffice documents. You can select a color from a color table, edit an existing color, or define new colors. These colors are stored in your color selection palette and are then available in all components of LibreOffice. You can also define colors within Impress by choosing Format > Area on the menu bar, or through the Line and Filling toolbar, but those colors will not be available to other components of LibreOffice.
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Appearance options
On the LibreOffice Appearance page (Figure 217), you can specify which items are visible and the colors used to display various elements of the user interface. The only option specific to Impress (and Draw) is the color of the grid points. Scroll down in the page until you find Drawing/Presentation. To change the default color for grid points, click the down-arrow by the color and select a new color from the pop-up dialog. If you wish to save your color changes as a color scheme, click Save, type a name in the Save scheme dialog, then click OK.
Figure 217. Changing the color of grid points in Impress and Draw
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General options
In the Options dialog, click LibreOffice Impress > General (Figure 219).
Text objects section Allow quick editing: sets Impress to immediately switch to text editing mode when you
click on a text object. You can also activate the text editing mode through the Allow Quick Editing icon on the Options toolbar (Figure 220). If the Options toolbar is not open, then go to View > Toolbars > Options on the main menu.
Only text area selectable: sets Impress to select a text frame when you click on text. In
the area of the text frame that is not filled with text, an object behind the text frame can be selected. You can also activate this mode through the Select Text Area Only icon the Options toolbar. on
New document section Start with Wizard: when selected Impress starts with the Presentation Wizard when
creating a new presentation using File > New > Presentation or one of the other methods of creating a presentation.
Settings section Use background cache: sets Impress to use the cache for displaying objects on the
master page. This setting speeds up the display. Uncheck this option if you want Impress to draw the background every time you display a slide.
Copy when moving: automatically creates a copy when you move, rotate or resize an
object while holding down the Ctrl key ( key for Mac). The original object will remain in its current position and size.
Chapter 11 Setting Up and Customizing Impress 227
Objects always movable: lets you move an object with the Rotate tool enabled. If this
option is not selected, the Rotate tool can only be used to rotate an object.
Unit of measurement: determines the unit of measurement used in presentations. Tab stops: defines the spacing between tab stops. Start presentation section Always with current page: specifies that a presentation starts with the current slide.
Uncheck this option to always start a presentation with the first page.
Compatibility section
The settings in this section are valid for the current presentation only.
Use printer metrics for document formatting: applies printer metrics for printing and for
formatting the display on the screen. Some formatting will depend on the printer selection or default printer on your computer and may vary if the presentation is moved to a different computer. If this option is not checked, a printer-independent layout is used for screen display and printing.
Add spacing between paragraphs and tables (in current document): calculates the
paragraph spacing in Impress exactly as Microsoft PowerPoint does. Microsoft PowerPoint adds the bottom spacing of a paragraph to the top spacing of the next paragraph to calculate the total spacing between both paragraphs. Impress normally uses only the larger of the two spacings.
View options
In the Options dialog, click on LibreOffice Impress > View (Figure 221).
Rulers visible: displays the rulers at the top and the left of the Workspace area. Guides when moving: displays dotted guides that extend beyond the box containing the
selected object and which cover the entire work area, helping you position the object when moving it. You can also use the Helplines When Moving icon (Figure 220 on page 227). on the Options toolbar
All control points in Bzier editor: displays the control points of all Bzier points if you
have previously selected a Bzier curve. If this option is not selected, only the control points of the selected Bzier points will be visible.
Contour of each individual object: displays the contour line of each individual object
when moving the object. This enables you to see if single objects conflict with other objects in the target position. If you do not select this option, Impress displays only a square contour that includes all selected objects.
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Grid options
The Grid page defines the grid settings for Impress. Using a grid helps you determine the exact position of your objects. You can also set this grid in line with the snap grid. In the Options dialog, click LibreOffice Impress > Grid (Figure 222).
Grid section Snap to grid: activates the snap function. If this option is selected, but you want to move or
create individual objects without snapping to the grid, press the Ctrl key to deactivate Snap to grid whilst moving the individual object. You can also use the Snap to Grid icon the Options toolbar. on
Visible grid: displays grid points on the screen. These points will not display or print as
part of a presentation.
Synchronize axes: applies any changes to the Resolution or Subdivision settings to both
axes of object movement.
Snap section To snap lines: snaps the edge of an object to the nearest snap line when you release the
mouse button. You can also use the Snap to Snap Lines icon on the Options toolbar.
To the page margins: aligns the contour of the graphic object to the nearest page margin.
The cursor or a contour line of the graphic object must be within snap range. You can also use the Snap to Page Margins icon on the Options toolbar.
To object frame: aligns the contour of the graphic object to the border of the nearest
graphic object. The cursor or a contour line of the graphic object must be within snap range. You can also use the Snap to Object Border icon on the Options toolbar.
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To object points: aligns the contour of the graphic object to the points of the nearest
graphic object. The cursor or a contour line of the graphic object must be within snap range. You can also use the Snap to Object Points icon on the Options toolbar.
Snap range: defines the snap distance between the mouse pointer and the object contour.
Impress snaps to a snap point if the mouse pointer is nearer than the distance selected in the Snap range box.
Snap position section When creating or moving objects: restricts graphic objects vertically, horizontally or
diagonally (45) when creating or moving them. You can temporarily deactivate this setting by pressing the Shift key.
Extend edges: controls how a square or circle is drawn with the drawing tool. When this
option is selected, when the Shift key is pressed before before pressing the mouse button a square is drawn equal to the longer side of a rectangle. This also applies to the ellipse tool: when the Shift key is pressed before you press the mouse button a circle will be drawn based on the longest diameter of the ellipse. When the Extend edges option is not selected, a square or a circle will be created based on the shorter side or diameter.
When rotating: restricts the rotation of graphic objects within the rotation angle that you
select. If you want to rotate an object outside of the defined angle, press the Ctrl key (Shift key on Mac) when rotating. Release the key when the desired rotation angle is reached.
Point reduction: defines the angle for point reduction. When working with polygons, you
might find it useful to reduce their editing points.
Print options
In the Options dialog, click on LibreOffice Impress > Print (Figure 223). See Chapter 10, Printing, E-mailing, Exporting, and Saving Slide Shows for more information about the options available.
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Figure 224. Menus page of the Customize dialog 2) Make sure the Menus page is open. 3) In the Save In drop-down list, select whether to save this customized menu in LibreOffice Impress or for a presentation. 4) In the section LibreOffice Impress Menus, select from the Menu drop-down list the menu that you want to customize. 5) To customize the selected menu, click on the Menu or Modify buttons. You can also add commands to a menu by clicking on the Add button. These actions are described in the
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following sections. Use the up and down arrows next to the Entries list to move the selected menu item to a different position. 6) When you have finished making all your changes, click OK to save them.
Figure 225: Adding a new menu 3) Use the up and down arrow buttons to move the new menu into the required position on the menu bar. 4) Click OK to save. The new menu now appears on the list of menus in the Customize dialog. It will appear on the menu bar itself after you save your customizations. After creating a new menu, you need to add some commands to it, as described in Adding a command to a menu on page 233.
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Figure 226: Moving a menu In addition to renaming a menu, you can specify a keyboard shortcut that allows you to select a menu command when you press Alt key plus an underlined letter in a menu command. 1) Select a menu or menu entry. 2) Click the Modify button in the Customize dialog (Figure 224) and select Rename. 3) Add a tilde (~) in front of the letter that you want to use as an accelerator. For example, to select the Save All command by pressing Alt+V, enter Sa~ve All.
Caution
Be careful when creating new shortcuts. In the example above, if the File menu is not already open, then pressing Alt+V opens the View menu. If another menu is open, Alt+V might activate some other command.
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3) When you have finished adding commands, click Close. 4) In the Customize dialog, you can use the up and down arrow buttons to arrange the commands in your preferred sequence.
Customizing toolbars
You can customize toolbars in several ways, including choosing which icons are visible, and locking the position of a docked toolbar, as described in Chapter 1, Introducing LibreOffice of the Getting Started guide. This section describes how to create new toolbars and add other icons (commands) to the list of those available on a toolbar. To open the customization dialog (Figure 228), do any of the following:
On the toolbar, click the arrow at the end of the toolbar and choose Customize Toolbar.
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Choose View > Toolbars > Customize from the menu bar. Choose Tools > Customize > Toolbars tab from the menu bar.
To customize toolbars: 1) Make sure the Toolbars page is open. 2) In the Save In drop-down list, select whether to save this customized toolbar for Impress or for a selected presentation. 3) In the LibreOffice Impress Toolbars section, select from the Toolbar drop-down list the toolbar that you want to customize. 4) Click the Toolbar button on the right to display a drop-down list of options for customizing the toolbar. 5) To display or hide commands, select or deselect the checkboxes in the Toolbar Content Commands section. 6) To change the position of commands on a toolbar, select a command and click the up and down arrows to the right of the lists. 7) When you have finished customizing a toolbar, click OK to save your changes.
Figure 229: New toolbar dialog The new toolbar now appears on the list of toolbars in the Customize dialog. After creating a new toolbar, you need to add some commands to it, as described below.
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5) On the Customize dialog, you can use the up and down arrow buttons to arrange the commands in your preferred sequence. 6) When you have finished making changes, click OK to save.
Figure 230: Change Icon dialog To use a custom icon, create it in a graphics program and then import it into LibreOffice by clicking the Import button on the Change Icon dialog. Custom icons must be 16 x 16 or 26 x 26 pixels in size and cannot contain more than 256 colors.
Caution
For example, suppose you wish to assign a shortcut key to easily insert a duplicate slide in your presentation. You could assign the Insert key as a logical shortcut for this purpose, as described below. 1) Choose Tools > Customize.
236 LibreOffice 3.5 Impress Guide
2) On the Customize dialog, open the Keyboard page (Figure 231). 3) As the shortcut key assignment is only relevant with Impress and not LibreOffice, select Impress at the upper right corner of the Keyboard page. 4) Select Insert in the Functions - Category list and Duplicate Slide in the Function list. 5) Select the shortcut key Insert in the Shortcut keys list and click the Modify button at the upper right. 6) Click OK to accept the change. Now the Insert key will insert a duplicate slide immediately after the currently selected slide.
Note
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To save keyboard shortcuts to a file: 1) After making your keyboard shortcut assignments, click the Save button on the Customize dialog. 2) In the Save Keyboard Configuration dialog box, select All files from the Save as Type list. 3) Enter a name for the keyboard configuration file in the File name box, or select an existing file from the list. If you need to, browse to find a file from another location. 4) Click Save. A confirmation dialog will appear if you are about to overwrite an existing file; otherwise there will be no feedback and the file will be saved.
Installing extensions
To install an extension, follow these steps: 1) 2) 3) 4) Download an extension and save it anywhere on your computer. In LibreOffice, select Tools > Extension Manager from the main menu. In the Extension Manager dialog (Figure 232), click Add. A file browser window opens. Find and select the extension you want to install and click Open. The extension begins installing. You may be asked to accept a license agreement. 5) When the installation is complete, the extension is listed in the Extension Manager dialog.
Tip
To get extensions that are listed in the repository, you can open the Extension Manager and click the Get more extensions online link. To install a shared extension, you need write access to the LibreOffice installation directory.
Note
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Using extensions
This section describes some of the more important and popular extensions to Impress. In each case, you need to first install the extension as described in the previous section.
Presenter Console
This is bundled with most installations of LibreOffice and provides extra control over slide shows (presentations). For example, the presenter has the ability to see the upcoming slide, the slide notes, and a presentation timer, while the audience only sees the current slide. The Presenter Console displays the elements in three easily changeable views:
The first view displays the current slide, including the effects, and the upcoming slide. The second view shows notes for the speaker in large, clear, and scalable type, plus the
current and upcoming slide.
The third view is a slide sorter view with the slide thumbnails.
The Presenter Console is only available for use if you have a second display connected to your computer. See Chapter 9, Slide Shows for more information about using the Presenter Console.
The Presenter Console works only on an operating system that supports multiple displays and only when two displays are connected (one may be the laptops built-in screen).
Note
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Presentation Minimizer
Reduces the file size of the current presentation. Images are compressed and data that is no longer needed is removed. Can also optimize the image quality size. Presentations designed for screen or projector do not require the same high quality as presentations designed for print.
Template Changer
Adds two new items to the File > Templates menu that allow you to assign a new template to a folder of presentations. All styles and formatting will be loaded from that template and the document will behave as if it were created using that template.
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Introduction
You can use LibreOffice without requiring a pointing device, such as a mouse or trackball, by using its built-in keyboard shortcuts. Tasks as varied and complex as docking and un-docking toolbars and windows, or changing the size or position of objects can all be accomplished with only a keyboard. Although LibreOffice has its own extensive set of keyboard shortcuts, each component provides others which are specific to its work. For help with LibreOffices keyboard shortcuts, or using LibreOffice with a keyboard only, search the LibreOffice Help using the shortcut or accessibility keywords. In addition to using the built-in keyboard shortcuts (listed in this Appendix), you can also define your own. You can assign shortcuts to standard Impress functions or your own macros and save them for use with Impress only, or with the entire LibreOffice suite. To adapt shortcut keys to your needs, use the Customize dialog as described in this section and in Customizing keyboard shortcuts in Chapter 11, Setting Up and Customizing Impress.
Mac equivalent
LibreOffice > Preferences Control+click z (Command) Shift+z+F5 z+T
Effect
Access setup options Open context menu Used with other keys Open the Navigator Open Styles and Formatting window
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Effect
Select text tool Enter group Exit group Duplicate graphic object Open Position and Size dialog box View slide show Open Navigator Start spelling checker Open thesaurus Edit points Fit text to frame Open the Styles and Formatting window
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Effect
Move the selected object or the page view in the direction of the arrow. Move the slide in the normal view. Constrain the movement of the selected object horizontally or vertically. Hold down Ctrl and drag an object to create a copy of the object.
Hold down Alt to draw or resize objects by dragging from the centre of the object outward. Select the object behind the currently selected object. Select the object in front of the currently selected object. Select adjacent items or a text passage. Click at the start of a selection, move to the end of the selection, and then hold down Shift while you click. Hold down Shift while dragging to resize an object to maintain the proportions of the object. Select objects in the order in which they were created. Select objects in the reverse order in which they were created. Exit current mode. Activate a place-holder object in a new presentation (only if the frame is selected). Move to the next text object on the slide. If there are no text objects on the slide, or if you reached the last text object, a new slide is inserted after the current slide. The new slide uses the same layout as the current slide.
Effect
Moves the focus to the first slide. Moves the focus to the next slide. Makes the slide with the focus the current slide.
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Effect
Zoom in. Zoom out. Fit page in window. Zoom in on current selection. Group selected objects. Ungroup selected group. Enter a group, so that you can edit the individual objects of the group. Click outside the group to return to the normal view. Combine selected objects. Split selected object. This combination only works on an object that was created by combining two or more objects. Bring to front. Bring forward. Send backward. Send to back.
Effect
End presentation. Play next effect (if any, else go to next slide).
Go to next slide without playing effects. Type the number of a slide and press Enter to go to the slide. Play previous effect again. If no previous effect exists on this slide, show previous slide. Go to the previous slide without playing effects. Jump to first slide in the slide show. Jump to the last slide in the slide show. Go to the previous slide. Go to the next slide. Show black screen until next key or mouse wheel event. Show white screen until next key or mouse wheel event.
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Index
A
accessibility 242 alignment of text 61 alignment tools 106 animation effects multiple 199 properties 199 area fills hatching 130 Arrow styles page 128 Asian language support 93 auto-abstract 174 AutoAbstract 175 AutoLayout 50 Fontwork toolbar 114 formatting text 143 Formatting marks options 55
G
Gallery Hide/Show button 81 themes 81 glue points custom 110 graphic filters 86 graphic styles creating 147 graphics 3D tools 110 interaction 113 rotating 101 grid 106 grid points, color 226 guides 228
B
Bzier curve 228 bitmap image 131 Bitmap image area fill 131 blink 145 brochure printing 210 bulleted list 63 Bullets and Numbering dialog 64
H
handles 41 Handout view 20, 185 handouts automatic layout options 187 creating 185 layout 185 template 187 thumbnails 185, 187 hatching patterns, creating 130 Help system 8 Hide/Show button 81 HTML Export wizard 216 hyperlink inserting 74
C
cache 227 certificate 219 chart entering data 160 color 87 content boxes (Impress) 26 Create AutoAbstract dialog 175 Create Style dialog 148 crop 87 curve 128 Custom Animation dialog 198 custom slide show 192
D
default formatting 54 default settings 209 Define Custom Slide Show dialog 193 Documentation 9 Drawing toolbar 92
I
image map 89 Impress content boxes 26 Insert picture dialog 78 interaction 113 International Support 9
E
e-mail attachment 219 Effect Options 201 Embed OpenDocument File 212
K
keyboard configuration 238 keyboard shortcuts 242 keyboard shortcuts, customizing 236
F
FDF 212 Fill Format mode 149 filters 85 Fontwork 114
Index
L
licensing of LibreOffice 11 lines formatting 124
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M
macros 238 main Impress window 15 Master Pages 33 master slides 28 Media Playback toolbar 166 Media Player 166
R
range selection (spreadsheet) 156 Rehearse Timings 196 resizing pictures 84 rotating pictures 84 rulers 228
N
Navigator 18 non-breaking hyphens 55 non-breaking spaces 55 Normal view 19 notes automatic layout options 183 fields 183 formatting 181, 184 Notes Master 181 Notes view 19, 181 numbered list 63
S
screen settings 177 shapes 3D 110 aligning 106 convert 112 shared extension 238 shortcut keys 244 Slide Design dialog 34 slide master 28 apply 34 author information 43 create 33 slide show custom 192 organizing 190 Rehearse Timings 196 settings 190 timing of automatic slide changes 195 Slide Sorter view 21 slide transition effects 213 slides animations 196 hide 29 layouts 26 master 28 select 22 summary slide 174 transitions 194 Slides pane 15 snap guides 107 special characters 54 spreadsheet cells 155 moving 154 range 156 Style and Formatting dialog 147 styles Fill Format mode 149 graphics styles 147 Styles and Formatting dialog 40 Styles and Formatting dialog 40, 147 summary slide 174 support 8 system font 231
O
objects converting 112 Open Source Initiative (OSI) 11 outline from Writer 174 outline level 63, 65, 67 Outline view 19, 175
P
Page Setup dialog 176, 183 page style 177 PDF form 212 PDF/A-1 212 personal key 219 Picture toolbar 85 pictures AutoLayout 78 color 87 crop 87 filters 85 formatting 83 resizing 84 rotating 84 transparency 87 polygon 97 Position and Size dialog 99, 102 Position and Size dialog than the mouse 41 position of text 59 PowerPoint format save as 221 presentation modifying 28 title slide 26 presentation styles AutoLayout area 56 Presentation Wizard 227
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T
Tasks pane 16 Template Management 46 templates create a template folder 47 delete a template folder 47 from other sources 44 supplied with LibreOffice 43 text alignment 61 animation 145 bulleted or numbered list 63 character formatting 58 default formatting 54 formatting 55, 143 outline level 63 paragraph formatting 60 pasting 53 position 59 selecting 56 text areas handles 41
text box AutoLayout 50, 63 moving 52 resizing 52 Text Formatting toolbar 54, 58 text tool 50 themes 81 three-dimensional objects 110 timing of automatic slide changes 195 title slide 26 toolbar 129 toolbars 17 tooltips 26 transparency 87, 141
U
unit of measurement 228 User guides 9 user interface, parts of 10
W
Windows Metafile Format (WMF) 112 Workspace 17
Index
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