LibreOffice-Suite-Impress/C3/Slide-Creation/English-timed
From Script | Spoken-Tutorial
Revision as of 09:52, 24 March 2017 by PoojaMoolya (Talk | contribs)
Time | Narration |
00:00 | Welcome to the Spoken Tutorial onSlide Creation in LibreOffice Impress. |
00:06 | In this tutorial, we will learn about:
Slide Shows Slide Transitions Automatic Shows. |
00:16 | You use Slide Shows to present slides before an audience. |
00:21 | Slide-shows can be shown on desktops or projectors. |
00:25 | Slide-shows occupy the entire computer screen. |
00:30 | Presentations cannot be edited in the slide-show mode. |
00:34 | Slide-shows are for display only. |
00:38 | Open the presentation "Sample-Impress.odp". |
00:43 | Let’s view this presentation as a Slide-Show. |
00:47 | From the Main menu, click on Slide Show and then on Slide Show. |
00:53 | Alternately, you can use the function key 'F5' to start the slide-show. |
01:00 | The presentation is displayed as a slide-show. |
01:04 | You can navigate between the slides by using the arrow-buttons on your keyboard. |
01:10 | Alternately, right-click the mouse for the context menu and select Next. |
01:16 | This will take you to the next slide. |
01:20 | To exit the slide show, right-click the mouse for the context menu. Here, select End Show. |
01:28 | Another way to exit is to press the Escape button. |
01:33 | You can also interact with your audience using the Mouse pointer as a pen option. |
01:40 | Let’s enable this option and see how it works. |
01:45 | From the Main menu, click Slide Show and Slide Show Settings. |
01:51 | The Slide Show dialog-box appears. |
01:54 | Under Options, check the boxes- 'Mouse Pointer visible' and 'Mouse Pointer as Pen'. |
02:02 | Click OK to close the dialog-box. |
02:06 | Again, from the Main menu, click Slide Show and then on Slide Show. |
02:13 | Notice that the cursor has now turned into a pen. |
02:17 | This option allows you to write or draw on the presentation while it is in the slide-show mode. |
02:24 | When you press the left mouse button, you can sketch with the pen. |
02:29 | Let’s draw a tick mark against the first point. |
02:34 | Pause this tutorial and do this assignment. |
02:38 | Use the sketch pen to draw a small diagram on an Impress slide. |
02:47 | Now, left-click on the mouse button. The next slide is displayed. |
02:52 | You can also advance to the next slide when you press the Space bar. |
02:57 | Let’s exit the slide show. Right-click for the context menu and click End Show. |
03:05 | Next, let’s learn about Slide Transitions. |
03:09 | What are Slide Transitions? |
03:12 | Transitions are effects that are applied to slides as we move or transition from one slide to the next, in a presentation. |
03:22 | From the Main pane, click on the Slide Sorter tab. |
03:26 | All the slides in the presentation are displayed here. |
03:31 | You can easily change the order of slides, in a presentation, in this view. |
03:37 | Let’s select slide 1. |
03:40 | Now, press the left mouse button. Drag and drop the slide in between slides three and four. |
03:48 | The slides are rearranged. |
03:52 | Press the Ctrl+Z keys to undo this action. |
03:57 | You can add different transitions to each slide, in one go. |
04:02 | From the Slide Sorter view, select the first slide. |
04:06 | Now, from the Tasks pane, click on Slide Transition. |
04:13 | Under the 'Apply to selected slides', scroll and select Wipe Up. |
04:19 | Notice that the transition effect is displayed in the Main pane. |
04:24 | You can control the transition speed by choosing the options from the Speed drop-down menu. |
04:31 | Under Modify Transitions, click on the Speed drop-down box. Click Medium. |
04:39 | Now, let’s set a sound to the transition. |
04:43 | Under Modify Transitions, click on the Sound drop-down box. Choose beam. |
04:52 | Similarly, let’s select the second slide. |
04:56 | In the Tasks pane, click on Slide Transition. |
05:00 | Under the Apply to selected slides, select Wheel Clockwise, 4 spokes. |
05.08 | Now click on the Speed drop-down box. Select Medium. |
05:13 | Next, click on the Sound drop-down box. Choose applause. |
05:21 | Now, let us preview the transition effect we have made. |
05:25 | Click Play. |
05:28 | We have now learnt how to animate ,and add a sound-effect to a slide transition. |
05:35 | Let us now learn how to create a presentation that advances automatically. |
05:42 | From the Tasks pane, click Slide Transition. |
05:46 | In Transition type, select Checkerboard Down. |
05:50 | In the Speed drop-down, select Medium. |
05:55 | From the Sound drop-down, select gong. |
06:00 | Check Loop until next sound. |
06:04 | Click the radio button Automatically after. |
06:09 | Select time as 1 sec. |
06:14 | Click on Apply to All Slides |
06:18 | Note, that clicking on the Apply to All Slides button applies the same transition for all the slides. |
06:25 | This way we need not add transitions for each slide individually. |
06:31 | From the Main menu, click on Slide Show and then select Slide Show. |
06:38 | Notice that the slides advance automatically. |
06:49 | Let’s press the Escape key to exit the presentation. |
06:54 | Let us now learn to create a presentation that advances automatically but with different display times for each slide. |
07:03 | This is useful when the content of some slides in the presentation are longer or more complex. |
07:13 | From the Main pane, first click on Slide Sorter tab. |
07:18 | Select the second slide. |
07:21 | Go to the Tasks pane. |
07:24 | Under Slide Transition, go to the Advance slide option. |
07:29 | In the Automatically after field, enter the time '2 seconds'. |
07:37 | From the Main pane, select the third slide. |
07:42 | Go to the Tasks pane. |
7:44 | Under Slide Transitions, go to the Advance slide option. |
07:49 | In the Automatically after field enter the time '3 seconds'. |
07:57 | Let’s select the fourth slide and follow the same steps as for the previous slides. And change the time to 4 seconds. |
08:08 | From the Main menu, click on Slide Show and then on Slide Show. |
08:13 | Notice, that each slide is displayed for a different length of time. |
08:19 | Let’s press the Escape key to exit the presentation. |
08:24 | This brings us to the end of this tutorial. In this tutorial, we have learnt about slide shows, slide transitions, automatic show. |
08:37 | Here is an assignment for you. |
08:40 | Create a new presentation. |
08:42 | Add: A wheel clockwise, |
08:46 | 2 spoke transition at medium speed, for the 2nd and 3rd slides, with a gong sound. |
08:54 | Create an automatic slide show. |
08:58 | Watch the video available at the following link. It summarizes the Spoken Tutorial project. |
09:04 | If you do not have good bandwidth, you can download and watch it. |
09:09 | The Spoken Tutorial Project team:
Conducts workshops using spoken tutorials. Gives certificates for those who pass an online test. |
09:18 | For more details, please write to:
contact at spoken hyphen tutorial dot org. |
09:25 | Spoken Tutorial project is a part of the Talk to a Teacher project. It is supported by the National Mission on Education through ICT, MHRD, Government of India. |
09:37 | More information on this mission is available at:
spoken hyphen tutorial dot org slash NMEICT hyphen Intro. |
09:48 | This tutorial has been contributed by DesiCrew Solutions Pvt. Ltd.
Thanks for joining. |
Contributors and Content Editors
Devraj, Madhurig, Minal, PoojaMoolya, Pratik kamble, Sandhya.np14