PowerPoint 2011 essentially provides fivefill options:solid,picture,gradient,texture and slide background fill, ofcourse there's a sixth option called 'No fill'. We have already explored thesolid fill option, in this tutorial, you'lllearn about working with gradient fills. Gradient fills are typically blended fills between two or more colors that graduate from one color toanother. To see a sample presentation containing gradient fills in PowerPoint, scroll down to the bottom of this page.
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You can create some pretty cool-looking and complicated equations by using PowerPoint 2013’s handy-dandy Equation feature. You wouldn’t even consider using ordinary text to try to create these equations, but they take only a few minutes to create with the Equation tool. Office 2011 for Mac: Apply Entrance Effects to PowerPoint Slides. Mae'r daflen yma yn helpu gyda gosod sylfaen ar waith ar guriad calon a ffitrwydd. Gallwch ei ddefnyddio mewn gwersi bioleg yn ogystal ag ymarfer corff.
Follow these steps to change or apply a gradient fill to a shape:
Sample Presentation of Gradient Fill in Shape:
Click below to view this presentation on SlideShare
Click below to view this presentation on YouTube
See Also:
Add Gradient Fills to Shapes in PowerPoint 2016 forWindows Add Gradient Fills to Shapes in PowerPoint 2016 forMac Add Gradient Fills to Shapes in PowerPoint 2013 forWindows Add Gradient Fills to Shapes in PowerPoint 2010for Windows Add Gradient Fills to Shapes in PowerPoint 2007 forWindows Add Gradient Fills to AutoShapes in PowerPoint 2002 and 2003for Windows
Start typing your equation.PowerPoint watches any text you type in an equation and does its level best to figure out how the text should be formatted. For example, suppose you enter the following: a = (b + 2c) / 2b.
When you press Enter, PowerPoint formats the equation automatically, as shown.If you type the letter x, for example, PowerPoint assumes that you intend for it to be a variable, so the x is displayed in italics. If you type cos, PowerPoint assumes that you mean the cosine function, so the text is not italicized. Start typing your equation.PowerPoint watches any text you type in an equation and does its level best to figure out how the text should be formatted.
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For example, suppose you enter the following: a = (b + 2c) / 2b. When you press Enter, PowerPoint formats the equation automatically, as shown.If you type the letter x, for example, PowerPoint assumes that you intend for it to be a variable, so the x is displayed in italics. If you type cos, PowerPoint assumes that you mean the cosine function, so the text is not italicized. To add a symbol that’s not on the keyboard, use one of the buttons in the Symbols section of the Equation Tools Design tab.The Symbols section contains a gallery of mathematical symbols most of which only Robert Oppenheimer could understand. To use this gallery, first click the More button in the bottom-right corner of the Symbols section.
Then choose the symbol category from the drop-down menu that appears at the top of the gallery.For example, the figure shows the Operators gallery. Additional galleries contain basic math symbols, Greek letters, negated relations, and other obscure symbols.
To create symbols stacked upon each other in various ways, use the controls in the Structures section of the Equation Tools Design tab.Each button in the Structures section reveals a gallery of structures that you can use to create equations with stacked symbols. Most structures include a symbol and one or more slots, in which you type text or insert other symbols or other structures.For example, this figure shows the gallery of templates that are displayed when you click the Radical button. These structures let you insert a square-root sign along with slots in front of and inside the sign.When you’re done, click outside of the equation to return to the slide.
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January 2023
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