2007 MicrosoftВ® Office System Inside Out (Bpg-Inside Out)

Before you learn in more detail about the main elements of the 2007 Microsoft Office system user interface, in this section you’re provided with an orientation to the elements’ names, appearance, and general functions. Figure 2–1 shows the application window for Word 2007, with several of the major elements labeled:

When you are composing a letter in Word or preparing a presentation in PowerPoint, you’ll most often work with the standard tabs and commands on the Ribbon. You’ll also use contextual tabs in addition to galleries and Live Preview. Examples of these elements are shown in Figure 2–4.

Figure 2–4: Tabs like the Table Tools tab in Word appear in context when you select an object. Many tabs provide galleries of formatting options that you can preview in your document.

The Ribbon, galleries, and Live Preview introduce fairly dramatic changes, not only with respect to the appearance of the Microsoft Office system user interface, but also in the ways people work with the programs. You’ll see a few examples of this later in this chapter and many more examples throughout the rest of this book.

Two elements of the Microsoft Office user interface that many users are familiar with- the status bar and ScreenTips-have been updated as well, with the goals of providing better access to information and assistance with, and more control over, how you view the file you’re working with.

Figure 2–5: ScreenTips provide more details about what a command can do. You can press F1 when you’re viewing a ScreenTip to open a Help topic about the command.

To reinforce what’s new in the 2007 Office system user interface, Table 2–1 summarizes the elements introduced in this section (as well as a few more) and compares them to the corresponding features in Microsoft Office 2003.

Table 2–1: Comparison of the 2007 Office Release to Microsoft Office 2003

Open table as spreadsheet

User Interface Elements in the 2007 Office Release

Corresponding Office 2003 User Interface Element

The Ribbon replaces menus and toolbars. The Ribbon is organized into tabs that represent the main functional areas of a program. When you select an object, such as a table or chart, contextual tabs appear on the Ribbon and provide commands relevant for the object.

Menus and toolbars

Most of the task panes you worked with in Office 2003 are replaced by groups of controls in the Ribbon. The few task panes that remain provide additional content to users. In the 2007 Office release, each task pane is its own separate pane. You can display multiple task panes, and you can arrange the position of each independently.

Task panes

Dialog boxes occur in the 2007 Office release, but they are not the main way of working with a program. The settings that users selected in dialog boxes, in many cases, are now assembled in gallery items so that users can see these options and choose the results they want. Dialog boxes can be opened from galleries or from the Ribbon for users who want to use them or when more advanced options are required.

Dialog boxes

Context (or shortcut) menus are still available in the 2007 Office release. Shortcut menus can, like the Ribbon, display galleries to make formatting more efficient.

Context menus

There is no change to keyboard shortcuts that use the Ctrl key in combination with another key, such as Ctrl+S for Save and Ctrl+B for Bold, or a single function key, such as F12 for Save As. The same shortcuts exist and continue to work as they did in Office 2003.

Office 2003 keyboard shortcuts

The 2007 Office release also includes a keyboard shortcut system for the Ribbon using the Alt key. Shortcut keys are displayed on Ribbon controls and tabs. You can also use the Alt key sequences from Office 2003. These work only for features that were in Office 2003; features of the 2007 Office release use only the new keyboard shortcuts.

Office 2003 keyboard shortcuts

In addition to displaying the task status, the status bar in the 2007 Office release displays information such as security warnings. Users can customize the status bar to show additional information about their document.

Status bar

Let’s start looking in more detail at the underlying concepts and how you can use and customize the 2007 Office release user interface. We’ll start with the Ribbon and command tabs.

Note 

Despite the changes in the appearance and organization of the Microsoft Office user interface, the mechanics of working with your computer are largely unchanged. You still use the mouse, the keyboard, a pen, or some other input device to perform the actions you need to take.

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