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Revision as of 14:43, 17 December 2013

VISUAL CUE NARRATION
00:00 Welcome to the Spoken tutorial on LibreOffice Writer- Creating Newsletters with Multiple Columns.
00:07 In this tutorial we will learn how to create newsletters in LibreOffice Writer and a few operations that can be performed on them.
00:17 Here we are using Ubuntu Linux 10.04 as our operating system and LibreOffice Suite version 3.3.4.
00:27 A newsletter is used as a publication, which gets circulated out to its subscribers in a regular time interval. For example - a periodical, a pamphlet and many more.
00:39 It has multiple columns as sections and makes it easier for the reader to go through different articles in these sections.
00:47 Using LibreOffice Writer one can create newsletters which make reading of articles much easier and faster.
00:55 Lets open a new text document by clicking on “File”, “New” and “Text Document” option.
01:03 Save this document with filename “Newsletter”.
01:13 So we have a new text document named “Newsletter”.
01:17 Now lets insert columns into our document.
01:20 To do so, first click on the “Format” button in the menu bar and then click on “Columns”.
01:27 A dialog box appears with various options -
01:31 selecting the number of columns you want,
01:34 setting the width and spacing of these columns
01:37 as well as setting the various properties of the separator lines.
01:42 We will select two columns for the newsletter document by increasing the column field value to “2”.
01:49 The five icons besides the column field show you the preview of the various formats available.
01:56 So lets click on the second format.
01:59 Lets keep all the other values which define the property of the columns as default.
02:05 And click on the “OK” button.
02:08 You see that 2 columns get displayed in the text area.
02:12 Let us write an article in our first column.
02:15 We will give its heading as “Nature” in bold text with font size 15.
02:21 And below that we will write an article on it.
02:25 You see that the cursor automatically goes to the next column after it reaches the end of the first column.
02:33 You can even insert a picture in the column and resize it so that it fits into the column.
02:39 Now after leaving out some spaces you can write another article into the column.
02:46 So we will first give it a heading as “Sports” in bold text with font size 15 and below that we will write an article on it.
02:56 So you see - columns make it easier for the reader to go through multiple articles.
03:02 Let us delete some sentences so that our article fits in the first column only.
03:08 Then, to access the further columns click on the “Insert” button and then click on “Manual Break”.
03:16 In the dialog box which appears, click on the “Column break” button and then click on the “OK” button.
03:23 You see that the cursor comes on the next column automatically.
03:27 So you can start writing another article in this column.
03:31 All the formatting options like
03:33 “Align left”, “Align right”,
03:36 adding “Background Color” to the text,
03:38 “Highlighting” the text and many other features
03:41 can be added to the text to make it attractive.
03:45 For example, we select the portion of the text to which we want to apply a background color.
03:51 Now click on the “Background Color” icon in the toolbar and then click on “Green 4”.
03:59 We see that the background color of the selected text changes to light green.
04:05 Like wise you can give different background colors to different parts of the text.
04:10 You can even add banners to the newsletter by first clicking on the “Text” option in the drawing toolbar.
04:18 Now place the textbox anywhere in the document where there is no written text.
04:24 Inside the textbox you can write any text which will act as a banner or ads.
04:30 So let us type some text like “This is a newsletter”.
04:35 You can even add effects to this text.
04:37 For example, first right click on the text and then click on the “Text” option in the menu.
04:45 A dialog box appears which has tabs namely “Text” and “Text Animation”.
04:50 Click on the “Text Animation” tab.
04:53 In the “Effects” field under this tab there are various options.
04:58 In order to blink the text in the newsletter, we click on the “Blink” option
05:04 And finally click on the “OK” button.
05:07 We see that the text “This is a newsletter” constantly blinks in the document.
05:13 Similarly, various such effects and graphics can be given to the text.
05:18 Now for writing a new article on the next page, you need to first click on the “Insert” button
05:25 And then click on the “Manual Break” option.
05:29 In the dialog box which appears, click on the “Page break” button.
05:34 And finally click on the “OK” button.
05:37 You see that the cursor comes on the next page.
05:40 This page contains the same column format as on the previous page.
05:46 For maintaining a word count in your article, first select a portion of your text or the entire document.
05:53 Now click on the “Tools” option in the menu bar.
05:57 Now click on the “Word Count” option in the dropdown box.
06:02 A dialog box appears which shows you the word count of current selection and the whole document as well.
06:10 It also shows the total count of characters in your entire document as well as in the selected text.
06:18 The spell check can be done automatically while writing the document.
06:23 Click on the “AutoSpellcheck” icon in the toolbar.
06:27 Now while writing the article, if there are any spelling mistakes, then Writer automatically shows them by underlining the word with a red line.
06:37 For example, when we write the word “Cat” as “C -A- A -T” and press the space-bar, we see that a red line is displayed below it.
06:48 But when we correct the word, the red line disappears.
06:52 Hence,we see that all the formatting options discussed in the previous tutorials can be applied in newsletters, too.
07:01 This brings us to the end of this spoken tutorial on
07:04 LibreOffice Writer.
07:06 To summarise, we learned about how to Create Newsletters in LibreOffice Writer and few operations which can be performed on them.
07:17 *Watch the video available at the following link
07:21 *It summarises the Spoken Tutorial project
07:24 *If you do not have good bandwidth, you can download and watch it
07:28 The Spoken Tutorial Project Team
07:31 *Conducts workshops using spoken tutorials
07:34 *Gives certificates for those who pass an online test
07:38 *For more details, please write to contact at spoken hyphen tutorial dot org
07:44 *Spoken Tutorial Project is a part of the Talk to a Teacher project
07:48 *It is supported by the National Mission on Education through ICT, MHRD, Government of India
07:56 *More information on this Mission is available at
08:00 *spoken hyphen tutorial dot org slash NMEICT hyphen Intro
08:07 *This tutorial has been contributed by DesiCrew Solutions Pvt. Ltd.
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