Microsoft Powerpoint 2007 Bible

Text attributes are modifiers that you apply to the text, such as bold, italics, underline, strike-through, shadow, and so on. PowerPoint offers several attributes, as shown in Figure 6.12.

Figure 6.12: Text attributes that are available in PowerPoint 2007.

There are actually several types of text attributes, and they can be divided into the following major groups:

As shown in Figure 6.14, the five most popular text attributes appear as toggle buttons in the Font group on the Home tab. They are Bold, Italic, Underline, Shadow, and Strikethrough.

Figure 6.14: Use the Font group's buttons for these five attributes.

The other attributes are available in the Font dialog box. You can access them by following these steps:

  1. On the Home tab, click the dialog box launcher in the Font group. The Font dialog box opens, as shown in Figure 6.15.

    Figure 6.15: Choose font attributes from the Font dialog box.

  2. In the Font Style drop-down list, choose the combination of bold and italic that you want: Regular, Bold, Italic, or Bold and Italic.

  3. Choose a text color from the Font Color drop-down list. (We'll look at font color as a separate topic later in this chapter.)

  4. If you want underlined text, choose an Underline Style from the drop-down list. The default color for an underline is the same as the color of the text; if you want a different color, you can choose it from the Underline Color drop-down list.

  5. In the Effects section, select or deselect the check boxes for any attributes that you want. Some of these attributes are mutually exclusive, and so one is deselected when you select the other:

    • Strikethrough and Double-strikethrough

    • Superscript and Subscript

    • All Caps and Small Caps

  6. Click OK to apply your choices.

Changing Text Case

Each character has a numeric value stored in the presentation file, and uppercase character numbers are completely different from their lowercase counterparts. For example, a capital B is not just formatted differently from a lowercase b-it is a different character.

As you learned in the preceding section, you can apply the All Caps attribute to some text to force it to appear in all uppercase format, but this is just an illusion. The identifying numbers for the characters have not changed; they're just wearing a mask. When you remove the attribute, the characters go back to the way they normally look.

If you want to really change the case of some text, including changing the numeric identifiers for the characters behind the scenes, then you must either retype the text or use the Change Case feature. You can access the Change Case attribute in the Font group on the Home tab, as shown in Figure 6.16. Change Case enables you to set a block of text to any of the following settings:

Figure 6.16: Change the case of the selected text by selecting a Change Case option from the menu.

When you use the Change Case attribute, the text retains no memory of its previous capitalization state. For example, if you used the Capitalize Each Word option on the word "PowerPoint," it would convert to "Powerpoint." If you wanted to re-capitalize the middle P, then you would have to manually retype it (or select only that P and choose Change Case Uppercase).

EXPERT TIP 

Most style guides dictate that you should capitalize all important words in titles, but not every word. For example, in the title "The Best of the Best," you do not capitalize the words "of" and "the." Unfortunately, the Capitalize Each Word option in Word cannot make that distinction for you, and so you must make those changes manually. However, Word's grammar checker does identify and fix these capitalization errors. If you have a long, text-heavy presentation, you might find it worthwhile to export the text to Word, perform a grammar check, and then re-import it.

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