From Stephen King:
Any word you have to hunt for in a thesaurus is the wrong word. There are no exceptions to this rule.
Discovered in 1001 Rules for My Unborn Son. It comes in as #432.
From Stephen King:
Any word you have to hunt for in a thesaurus is the wrong word. There are no exceptions to this rule.
Discovered in 1001 Rules for My Unborn Son. It comes in as #432.
One regular annoyance with MS Office (the old, pre-ribbon, versions) is its desire to demonstrate it knows more about your work than you do. It does this by hiding most of the options when you try and select from a menu.
Thankfully it’s simple to remind it who’s boss.
All is well again.
Sorry. There are more reasons for file bloat in MS Word than we can possible manage. So this article will focus on just one that we tend to run into regularly. Problem we had was when writing training materials and including images of overheads. We”re firm fans of the “Send to MS Word” option in Powerpoint. This gives great looking pictures of each slide that you can just drag and drop into your document. However what tends to happen is after you’ve dragged a few into the document the file size suddenly jumps from something reasonable (for MS Word!) to a behomoth; we were regularly having to manage files of 50+ megs.
But after suffering one more time, found a solution at University of Queensland. And it worked like a charm.
Issue is that the “Send to Word” option does not create images of each slide but instead creates individual Powerpoint objects. Solution is to convert each slide object to an image:
CTRL+SHIFT+F9To fix the whole document in one swoop, simply select everything (CTRL+A) before entering the special shortcut code above.
The easiest method to include an image of a MS Powerpoint slide in a MS Word document is to use the Send To option in Powerpoint. This creates an MS Word version of your Powerpoint file with pictures of each slide automatically generated. The slides appear a standard size, complete with edge frame, as they would appear to someone viewing them. It is then straighforward to cut & paste those pictures into your MS Word document.
Sadly this option is not valid for the Mac version of MS Powerpoint from office:2004. When selected in that version the output is a text version of the slide contents, not the pretty pictures.
To create an MS Word version of your slides:
This dialog allows you to choose where your slide notes are included in the output document. Since you only need the slide images it does not matter where the notes are put; however having them alongside makes your slide list easier to navigate.
Once you click OK an MS Word version of your overheads will be created. This will be a brand new document that contains a single table, one row per slide, with neat images of your overheads available for cut & paste.
One final tip. Do not click in another document while the Powerpoint export is being generated. If you do the slide pictures will be generated in the document you clicked in!