Thank you very much Mr. Rindsberg for that advice. Will give it a go shortly
and
let you know.
By 'process' I meant changing a lot of text data in the file and then
printing it out
on A4 along w/ the images. This means I have to get 2 slides per single,
printed
page - one part is the text, the other the image.
I can only do something like that in Word. Not a clue at this time (yet)
about doing
it in PowerPoint. So I'm just copying, pasting and re-adjusting things as
required in Word - but this is going to take me a very long time.
Thank you,
> > I can't get 'New' question to work. Every other day it's something else. If I
> > take over a minute to write this post here, I get some kind idiotic 'this
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> PPTools: www.pptools.com
> ================================================
> Thank you very much Mr. Rindsberg for that advice. Will give it a go shortly
> and
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> printed
> page - one part is the text, the other the image.
OK. Before you wear out your mouse finger, try doing this with Notes pages.
Choose File, Page Setup and change the "Notes, handouts & outline" orientation
to Landscape, then click OK
Choose View, Master, Notes Master.
Drag and resize the slide and text placeholders to match the layout you have in
mind.
Choose View, Notes and verify that it looks like you want it to.
Print.
> I can only do something like that in Word. Not a clue at this time (yet)
> about doing
> it in PowerPoint. So I'm just copying, pasting and re-adjusting things as
> required in Word - but this is going to take me a very long time.
>
> Thank you,
-----------------------------------------
Steve Rindsberg, PPT MVP
PPT FAQ: www.pptfaq.com
PPTools: www.pptools.com
================================================
Nak - 18 Jun 2006 13:25 GMT
Thanx for that extra bit of info. Should come in very handy. Your first bit
of advice
works just fine too. Produces some really huuuuge Word files, though (lots
of images for a training course).
Looks like the 'text' portions need to be edited in ppt first (which is easy
enough)
as they wind up as (for all intents and purposes) difficult to non-editable
'pictures'
in Word. But that's OK. Should be a mini-expert on ppt by end next week!
Greatly appreciate,

Signature
Nak
> > Thank you very much Mr. Rindsberg for that advice. Will give it a go shortly
> > and
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> PPTools: www.pptools.com
> ================================================
Steve Rindsberg - 18 Jun 2006 17:08 GMT
> Thanx for that extra bit of info. Should come in very handy. Your first bit
> of advice
> works just fine too. Produces some really huuuuge Word files, though (lots
> of images for a training course).
Have a look here for help with that:
Slide Into Word: A kinder, gentler Send To Word from PowerPoint MVP Bill
Dilworth
http://www.rdpslides.com/pptfaq/FAQ00667.htm
> Looks like the 'text' portions need to be edited in ppt first (which is easy
> enough)
> as they wind up as (for all intents and purposes) difficult to non-editable
> 'pictures'
> in Word.
If you get stuck and NEED to edit them in Word, they're probably WMF/EMFs and
can be ungrouped; but editing will be *very* tedious. As you say, best to do
it in PPT.
Also experiment with the Link option. You may be able to set things up such
that when you edit the PPT, the linked Word version "follows along".
But that's OK. Should be a mini-expert on ppt by end next week!
> Greatly appreciate,
-----------------------------------------
Steve Rindsberg, PPT MVP
PPT FAQ: www.pptfaq.com
PPTools: www.pptools.com
================================================
Nak - 20 Jun 2006 02:11 GMT
Roger all that and thanks again. Will get onto that link right now.

Signature
Nak
> > Thanx for that extra bit of info. Should come in very handy. Your first bit
> > of advice
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> PPTools: www.pptools.com
> ================================================