162 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
162 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 1915
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Title: HPR1915: 67 - LibreOffice Impress - Tables
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1915/hpr1915.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 11:05:25
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---
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This is HPR episode 1915 entitled 67 Libra Office Impress Tables and in part of the series, Libra Office,
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it is hosted by AYUKA and in about 16 minutes long, the summer is,
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Impress Tables and how to format them.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by an honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15.
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That's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Hello, this is AYUKA. Welcome to you to Hacker Public Radio and another exciting episode
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in our ongoing series on Libra Office Impress and today I want to talk about tables.
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Now we have already looked at three of the four objects that are offered to you on a new slide,
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charts, pictures and movies, so it's kind of time to take a look at tables.
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Now you do have some options here, you can embed a table from Calc or writer
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and there may be times where that makes sense, particularly if you have a reason to do object linking
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or embedding or the data is already there in the form you need it, but most of the time you
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can do what you need to do inside of Impress using its own functionality.
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Now as we saw last time with charts, you can just click the button in the middle of a new slide and
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insert a table that way, but as we also saw with chart there are some limitations there.
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All right, if you insert a table you lose the auto layout text box, if you put in some text you
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lose the button to insert the table, so again the alternative, you go to the insert menu and select
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table and whichever way you do it, a window is going to pop up, it's going to ask you to specify
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the number of rows and columns. Now you can adjust this later, but it's a little more work,
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so if you already know how many rows and columns you're going to need and that's not really
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rocket science to figure that one out, is it fill it in now, save yourself some trouble.
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Now this will insert a default table into your slide with the number of rows and columns you
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specified, but if you look at the sidebar on the right you'll see that the properties window has
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opened the table design section for you. That looks interesting. Now there's two sections to that
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table design, there are basically kind of templates that you can see that have different colors
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and then under that a series of check boxes, so let's take a look at these check boxes for a moment.
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First one, header row, and that usually is one of the two that's going to be checked by default
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when you create a new table. So when that is checked the very first row has a different background
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from the rest of the table. Usually that means a darker color, but it's just something that's
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going to set it apart. Then total row, that's similar to header row, but instead of the first row,
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it's the last row. So now if your table had numerical data with totals at the bottom checking
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that might be useful, it would help emphasize the totals row a little bit. Banded rows.
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Now this is like that old green and white computer paper. I'm assuming I'm not the only one old
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enough to remember that. It alternates the background from one row to the next to make it easier to
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read. First column makes the background darker on the first column. Last column makes the
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background darker on the last column. Then banded columns, like with banded rows, makes the columns
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alternate the background. Now you would never use all six of these together. That would be a hideous
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monstrosity, but I could imagine for instance selecting a design I like, so for instance I can
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take a look at these and the fourth one on the top turns out as turquoise. Select that,
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very nice color, and then say header row, banded rows, and first column. Now why would I do that?
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Well, the header row is the header, and for a lot of tables that first column is going to be row
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labels of some kind that is going to make the data easier to understand or description or something.
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So it can make sense to have both of those, and then of course banded rows just makes it easier to read.
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Now once you have put it in there, if you select the table, and remember when we talk select,
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what we mean is you double-click on it and then what you should see, and sometimes I've got to kind
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of click around to get this to work. I get a border around it and the eight handles. That means
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it's selected. Now at that point the table toolbar should open for you. On my system it docked at
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the bottom next to the drawing toolbar, but you can also click and drag it to the top or a side,
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or you could even have it as a floating toolbar if that's what you like. Now you can do a lot from
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this toolbar, so let's take a look at it. Remember that you can always read the name of the button
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by mousing over it and reading the pop-up. The buttons are table. This lets you create a table on
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the current slide. If you click the button, you get the same dialog we already saw for choosing
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columns and rows, or you can click the drop-down on the right to get a graphical chooser that will
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draw the rows and columns if that's how you like to do it. And you may be thinking, wait a minute,
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I thought I had to select the table to make this toolbar pop-up. When you select the table,
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it will pop up, but you could just have it open anyway by going to view toolbars and selecting it.
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So it's not useless. Line style. That button controls the borders between cells and let you
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select the style you want, like a solid line dotted dashed and so on. And then line color,
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again, for the borders of cells, what color is that line going to be?
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And then borders. This lets you choose where you want the borders to go on cells.
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Now, mostly in tables, we tend to see a full grid where the cells are bordered on all four sides,
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but you can choose to say just on one or both sides or just the top or just the bottom or, you know,
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you've probably seen these things before. See a lot of options. Then area style slash filling.
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That's two drop downs that are part of this. The first drop down lets you select from color,
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gradient, hatching, or bitmap. So you make a selection there. Then the second one lets you choose
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from the options available depending on what you chose the first time. So for instance,
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if I choose color and the first drop down, the second one will show all of the different colors I
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can select. Now, why would that be interesting? Well, let's say I've got a color that has been
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applied to my table as a whole, but I want to emphasize one particular cell. Select the cell,
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use these area style filling drop downs to give it a different background that's going to make it stand out.
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Merge cells. As you might expect, let you merge two cells into one. So you just select the two cells.
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Clicking and dragging is usually the most efficient way to do that that I have found.
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Then there's split cells that let you split a cell into two or more cells.
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You have the option of splitting horizontally or vertically, but it is worded in a very confusing
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manner. When they say horizontal or vertical, what they're saying is, where do you want us to draw
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the divider? So if you selected horizontal, it would draw a horizontal line through the middle of
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the cell to divide it. Or if you had it in three, it would draw two lines, whatever.
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And then that would split it into the cells stacked on top of each other. And you say,
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wait, man, I selected a horizontal. Yeah, I know. It's just maybe this makes perfect sense to
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everyone else in the world. To me, it seems very counterintuitive. It is what it is. So,
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now you know what to look for there. Then optimize. Now this is an interesting one.
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And I think it's worth getting to understand a little bit. This evenly distributes
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the selected cells. And it can be horizontal or vertical, as the case may be.
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And to see what we're talking about here, let's start with a cell that has more data that can be
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displayed. Now the cell will display part of it. But to see everything, you would need to make
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the cell bigger. This button will do that. But it will also make the rest of the cells you select
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expand equally to the one that needs to be expanded. So you select a group of cells, you click
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optimize. And what's going to happen is it'll expand enough to display everything, but it'll expand
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all of those cells equally. Now, if you only select cells in a couple of rows or columns,
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only those will be changed. If you select the entire table, all of the cells of the table will
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change by the same amount, which I think results in a better display in most cases. Also note,
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this goes the other direction. It will reduce cell sizes if the cells are larger than they need
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to be to display all of your data. Now, as a rule, I use the optimize button only when I first
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selected the entire table. Because I think the result is a lot better when all of the cells are
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the same size and it's symmetrical. To me, tables just look weird when I've got different row heights
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or different column widths all over the place. You know, your call, but the optimize button will
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help you to get everything even. Then we've got three buttons, top, center, and bottom. And here
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they're talking about where the data is in the vertical thing of the cell. So is it the top of
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the cell centered in the cell or on the bottom of the cell? Then four buttons, insert row, insert
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column, delete row, delete column. I like to think these buttons are self-explanatory.
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Then there's a button called table design. It doesn't do a damn thing. All right, the reason is
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the table design feature was moved to the sidebar. It's the thing we started talking about when we
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started talking about tables. And because it's there, it doesn't need to be on the table toolbar anymore.
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It probably will be removed in a future release. Then finally, table properties.
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This opens a window where you can choose the font, the font effects, the borders, and the background.
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Now, this affects the entire table, but the assumption here is that you want all the cells to be
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the same. You know, if you wanted to do something with individual cells, you could, for instance,
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change the background using what we talked about previously, the area style filling,
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selecting cells and using those. You want to change the font. We'll talk about that in a moment.
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So the table properties, though, is for the whole table.
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Now, there's three buttons you cannot see on the toolbar, but you can reach them.
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And you reach them by right-clicking on a blank space on the toolbar. And in the pop-up,
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select visible buttons. In that list, you'll see all of the buttons we've already mentioned,
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plus three buttons you did not see. Now, you can add any or all of them from here by clicking
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on the button to add it to the toolbar. They are select table. And this lets you select the entire
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table with the border and eight handles. And it's a lot easier than clicking on the slide until you
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get it. I recommend adding it. Then the others are a little more optional. There's two of them.
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Select column and select row. With your cursor in a cell, clicking on one of these buttons will
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select the entire row or column. Probably handy, but if you find too many buttons confusing,
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these are ones you can get along without. Clicking and dragging, I find, is a very quick way to
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select a row or a column. It's just not that hard. Now, note that you can also remove a button
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by going to that visible buttons thing and clicking on a button you don't need. For example,
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the table design button is useless. So remove it. You don't need to take up space with that.
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Now, as we saw previously, the assumption in press makes in your table when you select table
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properties is that all cells will be formatted identically and have the same properties.
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But suppose you want to make some cells different. Two cases that are similar come to mind.
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Frequently, the first row of a table is a header row, which is different. And the first column is
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frequently a description, which is a, frequently a little bit different as well. What if you wanted
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them to have, for instance, different fonts or alignment or what have you? A good example,
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when I do tables, I like to make my headers bolder and I usually will center them even if the rest
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of my table is flush left and standard weight. Well, to change the font or font weight for a header row,
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I could select the row either by clicking and dragging or by using the select row button.
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Then I can right-click and in the pop-up menu, I can select character and then change the font,
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make it bigger, make it bold, add font effects like underlining and so on.
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Then I can right-click again, but this time select paragraph and on the third tab make the row centered.
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So in this way, I can make individual changes to any cells or groups of cells within the table.
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And so with that, we've now completed our look at all of those four objects that the
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default slide tells you you can put in and we've seen how to put them in and what to do with them.
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So we're actually fairly close to wrapping up our look at the impress, but I think for next time,
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what I'm going to do is something we haven't talked about yet is animations and that's also going
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to be a little bit of fun. And so with that, this is Huka for Hacker Public Radio, signing off
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and reminding you, as always, to support FreeSoftware. Bye-bye.
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