When you want to compare two PowerPoint presentations, stack the windows so that you can view each presentation without flipping back and forth.
- Open two presentations.
- Go to View.
- Select Arrange All. PowerPoint stacks both presentations side by side.
- Navigate between slides to compare them individually.
- On your computer, open a document or a slide in a presentation.
- Right-click a cell in a table.
- To add a row or column next to the selected cell, click: Insert column left. Insert column right. Insert row above. Insert row below.
- Select the columns or rows that you want to make the same size, and then click the Table Layout tab.
- Under Cells, click Distribute Rows or Distribute Columns.
Set up PowerPoint to use Presenter view with two monitors
On the Slide Show tab, in the Monitors group, select Use Presenter View. In the Display Settings dialog box, on the Monitor tab, select the monitor icon that you want to use to view your speaker notes, and then select the This is my main monitor check box.Once the slideshow reaches the end, it repeats from the beginning.
- Open your PowerPoint presentation.
- Click the [Slide Show] tab > From the "Set Up" group, click "Set Up Slide Show".
- From the resulting dialogue box, check "Loop continuously until 'Esc'" under the "Show options" section > Click [OK].
Modifying the table style
- Click anywhere on the table. The Table Tools tab will appear on the Ribbon.
- Select the Table Tools Design tab, and locate the Table Styles.
- Click the More drop-down arrow to see all of the table styles.
- Hover the mouse over the various styles to see a live preview.
- Select the desired style.
Create and format a table in PowerPoint
- Select the slide that you want to add a table to.
- On the Insert tab, select Table.
- In the Insert Table dialog box, do one of the following: Use the mouse to select the number of rows and columns that you want.
- To add text to the table cells, click a cell, and then enter your text.
To place a table in a text box, click Insert > Text Box > Draw Text Box, and draw a text box in the document. Click inside the box and add the table by clicking Insert > Table.
In PowerPoint, a placeholder is a pre-formatted container on a slide for content (text, graphics, or video). The pre-set formatting makes it easier to format slides consistently. You format a placeholder in Slide Master view. Then you use the placeholder—add content to it—in Normal view.
- On the Insert tab, in the Text group, click Text Box.
- Click in the presentation, and then drag to draw the text box the size that you want.
- To add text to a text box, click inside the text box, and then type or paste text. Notes:
Divider slides are viewed by many presenters as an unimportant – and even frivolous – part of a presentation. A slide containing a bulleted list of discussion topics at the beginning of each section is typically considered sufficient. Divider slides: Provide a clear, visual delineation between sections.
Click the Insert tab. Click the Date & Time button. Click the Slide or Notes and Handouts tab. Click the Date and time check box.
The stars are just an indication that the particular slide has custom animation. That was you can quickly see at a glance if a slide has content that is animated. The same star symbol is also shown when the slide itself has any slide transition set.
Create a brochure in PowerPoint for the web. Tip: If you're already in PowerPoint for the web, get to the brochure templates by going to File > New, and then below the template images click More on Office.com. You'll be on the Templates for PowerPoint page. In the list of categories, click Brochures.
A slide is a single page of a presentation. Collectively, a group of slides may be known as a slide deck. In the digital age, a slide most commonly refers to a single page developed using a presentation program such as Microsoft PowerPoint, Apple Keynote, Apache OpenOffice or LibreOffice.