PowerPoint 2007 for Starters: The Missing Manual

6.3. Creating Tables

Since ancient times, people have organized information into tablesrows and columns containing a number or bit of text in each cell . By now, you'd think working with tables would be a no-brainer.

It's not. Adding a table to your slideshow is easier in PowerPoint 2007 than it was in earlier versions of the program and the results are more impressive looking. But thanks to the overwhelming number of choices PowerPoint 2007 gives you, the process of adding a table can cause more headaches then ever. You start with four ways to create a table, plus you have dozens of ways to tweak every imaginable table element, from the lines that separate your columns to the shading that appears in your rows.

But nothing lets your audience compare figures better than a table. So eventually, you must create one. This section shows you the easiest way to create a table. Then, you'll see how to add the basics: data, a title, column headings, and so on.

6.3.1. Creating a Basic Table

PowerPoint gives you four different ways to create a table: by mousing over a grid, by typing your table dimensions into the Insert Table box, by drawing the table's outline on a slide, or by inserting an Excel table. Most of the time, you want to use one of the first two options, which are the quickest and easiest. (You can read about the other two methods in the boxes in Section 6.3.1.1.)

Whichever approach you choose, after you've created your table, you need to fill it with data and add a title and column headings. The following sections walk you through the entire process.

6.3.1.1. Creating rows and columns

To create a table, you start by telling PowerPoint how many rows and columns you want your table to have. PowerPoint gives you a gloriously easy way to do somousing over a grid to define the size and shape of your table.

Here's how:

  1. Select the slide where you want to place your table. Go to Insert Tables Table .

    Up pops a menu similar to the one shown in Figure 6-19.

  2. Move your mouse over the grid to select your desired configuration of rows and columns .

    PowerPoint highlights the cells your cursor passes over, and displays your proposed table dimensions at the top of the menu. In Figure 6-19, for example, the top of the menu reads "4x3 Table," corresponding to the four-column-by-three-row grid that's highlighted. On your slide, PowerPoint previews your table, which grows and shrinks as you highlight more and less of the grid. (The table preview shows the rows only, not the columns.)

    POWER USERS' CLINIC

    Drawing Tables

    in Section 6.3.1, you see two ways to create a basic table: by mousing over a grid, or by typing in the number of columns and rows you want. These two table creation options are all most folks will ever need.

    But suppose you're trying to work your table around other slide content and can't guess precisely how many rows and columns you need to create a table that just fits the space you have. PowerPoint's got your back: It lets you draw the outline of a table the size you want it, and then carve it up into rows and columns later.

    1. If you like, go to the Table Tools Design Draw Borders group and click Pen Style, Pen Weight, and Pen Color to customize the table border youre about to draw. You can choose a border style of solid, dashed, or dotted ; a border thickness ; and a border color, respectively.

    2. Choose Insert Tables Table Draw Table.

    3. Drag to draw the outline of your table. As you drag, you create a dotted outline. When you let go of your mouse, PowerPoint replaces the dotted outline with a proper table frame.

    4. Press Esc to turn off drawing.

    5. Choose Table Tools Layout Merge Split Cells Layout.

    6. PowerPoint carves up your table based on the number of columns and rows you specified.

  3. When your cursor reaches the bottom right cell of the table you want to create, click that cell .

    PowerPoint adds a table to your slide containing the number of rows and columns you specified, and displays the Table Tools tab (see Figure 6-20).

Figure 6-19. Mousing over a grid, as shown here, is the easiest way to tell PowerPoint how many columns and how many rows you want your table to have. But if you want to create a table that's larger than 10 columns by 8 rows, or if you're more comfortable typing than using a mouse, then use one of the three options at the bottom of the menu for creating a table.

Figure 6-20. Behold the basic table, complete with a header row (the darker -colored row) across the top. Unless you tell it different, PowerPoint lightly tints , or bands, every other row to make it easier for your audience to read your table. You see how to change both of these formatting effects starting in Section 6.3.1.6.


Tip: Instead of using your mouse to tell PowerPoint how many columns and rows you want your table to have, you can go to Insert Tables Table Insert Table to display the Insert Table dialog box (Figure 6-21) and type the number of columns and rows you want. When you finish, click OK to dismiss the dialog box and add your newly created table to your slide.

Figure 6-21. To add a table to a slide, select Insert Tables Table Insert Table. The Insert Table dialog box also pops up when youre working on a slide to which you've applied a content layout, and you click the table icon displayed in the center of the slide.

POWER USERS' CLINIC

Inserting an Excel Table

PowerPoint has some nifty table tools, but nothing like Excel's sophisticated spreadsheet formulas. If you need to use calculations or scientific notation in your table, you can borrow these features from Excel. Just tell PowerPoint where you want to insert the table, pop into Excel, whip out your table, and then pop back to PowerPoint, where you find your newly created Excel table displayed on your slide. Here's the step-by-step:

  1. Choose Insert Tables Table Excel Spreadsheet. Excels ribbon replaces PowerPoint's, and a blank Excel spreadsheet appears on your slide (Figure 6-22).

  2. Choose File Close. Excels ribbon

  3. Choose File Close. Excels ribbon disappears.

  4. In the "Do you want to save the changes you made to your presentation?" dialog box that pops up, click Yes.

Figure 6-22. It's a little disconcerting when Excel's ribbon takes over, but that's what happens when you insert an Excel table. The benefit, of course, is that you can use the power of Excel to create a whiz-bang table directly on your PowerPoint slide.

6.3.1.2. Selecting cells, rows, and columns

Before you can add data to a cell or format a cell, row, or column, you first have to select that cell, row, or column. To select a cell, simply click in the cell. To select multiple cells, click in one cell, and then drag your cursor to select additional cells. PowerPoint highlights cells as you mouse over them to let you know which cells you're selecting.


Tip: Another way to select multiple cells is to click in one cell, and then Shift-click in another. Doing so tells PowerPoint to select all the cells in between.

To select a column or a row:

  1. Mouse above the column you want to select (or to the left of the row you want to select) .

    Your cursor turns into a thick down-arrow (see Figure 6-23).

  2. Click just above the column (or to the left of the row) you want to select .

    You can also click a cell in the column or row you want to select, and then click Table Tools Layout Table Select Select Column or Table Tools Layout Table Select Select Row.

    PowerPoint tints the column (or row) to let you know you've selected it.

Figure 6-23. As you mouse just above a column, wait for your cursor to change to a small arrow. When it does, click to select the column. Here you can see the tinting that PowerPoint uses to let you know you've successfully selected a column.

6.3.1.3. Selecting entire tables

PowerPoint makes a distinction between selecting all the cells in a table, and selecting the table itself. You select all the rows and columns in a table if you want to delete or format the contents of all the cells. You select the table itself if you want to resize, reposition, or delete the table, or if you want to change the font of your table text by applying a table style (see Section 6.3.2.2).

The previous section shows you how to select all the cells in a table. To select the table itself, click any cell in table you want to select. Then choose Table Tools Layout Table Select Select Table. You can also drag your cursor around your table to select it. (Or, if you prefer, right-click any cell in your table and then, from the context menu that appears, choose Select Table.)

Whichever way you go about it way, after you successfully select a table, PowerPoint highlights the table frame and turns your cursor into a four-headed arrow.


Warning: Clicking in a cell highlights the table frame, too, which can mistakenly lead you to think you've selected the table. But if you want to, say, delete or apply an effect (such as color) to your table as a whole, then you need to select the table as described above: simply clicking in a cell doesn't cut it.
6.3.1.4. Adding data

After you've added a table to your slide, you need to fill the cells with data. To do so, click in any cell and begin typing. To move to the next cell, press Tab or click in the next cell.

6.3.1.5. Adding a title

PowerPoint doesn't offer you any special way to add a title to your table. Instead, you simply add a text box, type in the title text you want, and then position the text box over your table. Chapter 1 shows you how to add and position text boxes.

6.3.1.6. Adding column headings

You add a column heading the same way that you add any other bit of data to a table cellby clicking in the cell and then typing. But because most folks want to draw special attention to column headings, PowerPoint gives you a quick way to highlight them.

Here's how it works. When you create a table, PowerPoint highlights the first row (Figure 6-23) for you. But if the first row of your table doesn't appear highlightedperhaps your co-workers has been fiddling with your presentation fileyou can recover the highlighted effect by going to Table Tools Design Table Style Options and, in the Table Style Options group, turning on the Header checkbox.

PowerPoint tints the first row of your table an attractive color based on your table's style. It also automatically switches the color of the text in the first row to a contrasting color. See Figure 6-23 for an example. (Want to change these row highlights? See the next page.)

6.3.2. Tweaking Tables

Adding a basic table to your slide may be all you need. But once you type more than a couple rows' data, odds are good you'll need to insert a row here or resize a column there. Also, once you've got your table data typed in the way you want it, you may decide to spice up your table with a bit of formatting. You might want to change the color of your table so that it coordinates with your company's logo, or draw a big, thick border around a section of your table to draw attention to it.

PowerPoint lets you change virtually every element of your table, from the width of your rows and columns to the background color of each cell. This section shows you the most useful ways to work with table data and modify your table's appearance.

6.3.2.1. Applying prebuilt styles

The basic table you create in PowerPoint is just thatbasic. To spice it up with a predefined collection of formatting effects including color, shading, and borders:

  1. Click any cell in your table. Then go to Table Tools Design Table Styles. In the Table Styles group, mouse over the style options .

    As you mouse over each option, PowerPoint displays a live preview on your slide.

    To see a gallery of additional style options, click the down arrow in the Table Styles group.

  2. Click the style option you want to apply to your table .

    PowerPoint redisplays your table based on the style you chose.

6.3.2.2. Highlighting rows and columns

Say you're showing your boss or your teacher an important table. You know she's going to have only a few minutes to examine it, so to emphasize the important numbers , you take a yellow pen and highlight them. PowerPoint lets you do something similar in the tables you add to your slides: you can highlight specific columns or rows (such as the totals row) or tell PowerPoint to lightly tint every other column or row for readability.

If you've had a chance to check out Figure 6-23, you've already seen how PowerPoint applies header rows and banded rows to your table. In addition to tinting the first row of your table and lightly tinting every other row, you can tell PowerPoint to add a totals row, highlight the data in the first or last column, or band columns (instead of rows). Here's how:

Figure 6-24. Turning on Total Row tells PowerPoint to add a thicker line, and bold the data and color the background in the last row of the table.

6.3.2.3. Inserting and deleting rows and columns

You've typed in twenty cells' worth of data when you realize you accidentally skipped a row. No sweat: simply insert a new blank row and type the skipped numbers.

To insert a row or a column, right-click one of the cells in your table and then, from the context menu that appears, choose Insert Insert Above or Insert Insert Below (to insert a row to the above or below your currently selected cell, respectively) or Insert Insert Left or Insert Insert Right (to insert a column to the left or right of your currently selected cell, respectively).

To delete a row or column, right-click any cell in the row or column you want to delete and then, from the context menu that appears, choose Delete Rows or Delete Columns. To delete multiple rows or columns, select them first; then right-click.

6.3.2.4. Changing the width of a row or column

Each table that you create begins with standard, consistently sized rows and columns. But depending on the content that you add to your cells, you may want to increase or decrease the width of a row or column. For example, if you type a column heading wider than the column width, PowerPoint assumes you want to break it up into two lines. If you don't agree, you can widen the column.

To adjust the width of a row or column:

  1. Click anywhere in your table .

  2. Mouse over the cell border of the row or column you want to adjust .

    Your cursor turns into the double-headed arrow cursor shown in Figure 6-25.

  3. Click the cell border and drag to adjust the row (or column) width .


Note: If you'd prefer to type numbers for the width and height of your rows or columns, you can. Just select the rows or columns you want to work with, then choose Table Tools Layout Table Size Width or Table Tools Layout Table Size Height and click the arrows to increase or decrease row (or column) size. As you adjust the numbers, PowerPoint automatically redraws your table.
6.3.2.5. Aligning data inside cells

Unless you tell it otherwise , PowerPoint assumes you want the text and numbers you type into your table cells to be top- and left-aligned. But you're free to change that to anything else you like. For example, text often looks nice when centered. Numbers are usually easier to read when right aligned.

Because most folks find vertical alignment options (top, center, and bottom) most useful, those are the options easiest to get to. But by using the Cell Text Layout dialog box described below, you can align your data eight ways to Sunday.

Figure 6-25. Simply drag to adjust the width of a column, as shown here, or a row. You know you're exactly over a column border when you see the double-headed arrow.

To realign data:

  1. Select the cells whose contents you want to realign .

  2. Go to Table Tools Layout Alignment and choose Align Top, Center Vertically, or Align Bottom .

    PowerPoint redraws your table using the alignment you selected.

  3. If vertical alignment isn't what you want, click Table Tools Layout Alignment Cell Margins Custom Margins .

    The Cell Text Layout dialog box appears.

  4. In the Cell Text Layout dialog box, click the Internal Margins options to align your text the way you want it to appear .

    PowerPoint redraws your table using the alignment options you selected.

To align the text in your data cells horizontally, follow the same steps, but adjust the internal left and right margins.

6.3.2.6. Merging (and splitting) cells

Depending on the data you're trying to present, you may want to merge cells (erase the border between cells) or split cells (add a border between cells). Merging cells is especially useful for creating a heading inside your table, as shown in Figure 6-26 (top). You want to consider splitting cells when you find yourself cramming more than one or two words, phrases, or sentences in a single cell (Figure 6-26, bottom).

Figure 6-26. Top: The text in this table is okay, but its placement isn't particularly stellar .

Bottom: Here you see the same table, with two minor adjustments: the two cells in the top row were merged, and the two cells in the right column were each split. The result (after a bit of the cell alignment magic described in Section 6.3.2.4) is attractive and professional looking.

To merge a cell, select the cells you want to merge and click Table Tools Layout Merge Merge Cells. You can also right-click a selection and choose Merge Cells.

To split a cell, select the cell you want to split and then click Table Tools Layout Merge Split Cells (or right-click the selected cell and choose Split Cells). In the Split Cells dialog box that appears, type in the number of columns and number of rows you want your newly split cell to have. When you finish, click OK.

6.3.3. Resizing Tables

PowerPoint gives you two options for resizing your table:

6.3.4. Repositioning Tables

You move a table around on your slide similar to the way you move pictures, charts , and other objectsby dragging. Simply mouse over your table's frame until you see a four-headed arrow, and then drag to reposition your table.

6.3.5. Deleting Tables

You'll probably be surprised to learn that you don't delete a table the way you delete just about everything else in PowerPointby right-clicking it and then choosing Home Delete. (Doing so deletes the slide on which the table appears.)

Instead, you need to select the table (Section 6.3.1.3) and then press Delete.

You can also cut the table by selecting it and then choosing Home Cut. (Technically speaking, cutting isnt the same things as deleting, but it's close enough. See Section 2.1.2 for details.)

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