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Episode: 1785
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Title: HPR1785: 54 - LibreOffice Impress - Creating a Presentation
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1785/hpr1785.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 09:16:17
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---
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This in HPR episode 1,785 entitled, 54, Libra Office Impress, creating a Prementation and
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in part of the series, Libra Office, it is hosted by AYUKA and in about 11 minutes long.
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The summary is the mechanics on creating a Prementation in Impress.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by An Honest Host.com.
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At 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15, that's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's Honest and Fair at An Honest Host.com.
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Hello, this is AYUKA, welcoming you to Hacker Public Radio and another exciting episode
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in our series on Libra Office, focusing for now on the module called Impress presentation
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graphics.
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And we've looked at some of the theory behind all of this, but at some point you got
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to stop with the theory and start getting with the practice.
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So what I want to do now is take you through how to actually create that presentation.
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Now I'm going to do this on the assumption that you are taking the advice I gave you
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before and you're going to start with a blank presentation.
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So let's say you want to start your presentation, this can happen in several ways.
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If you still have the presentation wizard opening when you first open Libra Office
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in press, you can select empty presentation, then click next, click next, then create.
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And you should get a blank presentation with white slides and black text.
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Now if you've turned off the presentation wizard as we discussed and remember the way
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to do that is you go to tools, options, Libra Office in press general, look for new document
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and remove the check mark.
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And if that happens when you go into Libra Office, it will open directly into a blank presentation.
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And as I said, that is the way I have Libra Office in press configured for me.
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And I recommend it for the reasons we discussed previously.
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Now when it opens, you will have the things on the screen that we went over in the previous
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tutorials.
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So on the left side, you will have the slides pane, which has your slides in order down
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the left column.
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Since this is a new presentation, you only have one slide there now.
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But as you build your presentation, you will add slides.
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And the center is the workspace.
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And it has a slide on it ready for you to begin entering your content.
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The workspace is where you do most of your editing, so you will be in here a lot.
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Then on the right side, you have the sidebar, and it will be open to properties layouts.
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Here you can see all of the available slide types you can choose from.
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One of them will have a black box around it, and that is the slide type on your workspace
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right now.
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It will be a title slide, because of course that is the first slide in a presentation,
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and Libra Office in press makes the most common choices the defaults.
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The title slide has two sections.
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In the top section, it says click to add title.
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When you click inside this box, this text goes away, and you can put in the title of your
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presentation.
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So start typing.
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If your presentation has a long title, it will wrap to the next line with everything centered.
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Now a note on this.
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The way this title is formatted is governed by a presentation style, and we'll discuss
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presentation styles in more detail later.
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For now though, let's accept the default choices.
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Under the title is a box that reads click to add text.
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While this could be almost anything, generally on a title slide you would put your name,
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and perhaps a company or other affiliation.
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If you wished an email address or other contact information should go here.
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These days, many a presentation, particularly at a conference, is uploaded to a website
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for people to download later, and it is a good thing in that case if there is some contact
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information.
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Once you have finished this slide, you need to go to the next slide.
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There is a button on the presentation toolbar that looks like a rectangle with a green plus
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side.
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It has a drop down arrow next to it, but you can just click the button to get the default.
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In this case, the default again has two sections, but slightly different.
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The top section still says click to add title, but now that refers to the title of the slide,
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not the title of the whole presentation.
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And the lower section still says click to add text, but now there is a difference.
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This text has a button next to it, and then in the center of the slide is a square with
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four sections, which tells you that you can insert a table, a chart, a picture, or an audio
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or video.
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This slide appears by default because for most people, most of the time, it is the one
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they will use.
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Now if you just start typing text in here, it becomes a bullet point.
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So if you wanted to create a list of bullet points, you are all set to go.
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Type in your first one, press enter, and you will then jump to the second bullet.
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Type in something, press enter, jump to the third one, and so on.
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If you need to create subpoints, go to the text formatting toolbar, that is the one
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with the font selector, and look for white outlined arrows toward the right.
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The arrow pointing to the right is the Demote arrow, and the one pointing to the left
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is the Promote arrow.
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Click the right arrow to move your point under the one above.
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Type your subpoints, pressing enter after each one until you are done.
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This will leave you with one last subpoint you don't want, but clicking the left arrow,
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promote, will get you back to level one.
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By the way, you can move entire groups of points up or down as well, such as a bullet
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point and all of its subpoints.
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Just highlight the group and use the up or down arrow next to the Demote and Promote
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arrows.
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As you keep typing and adding bullet points, the text will go down the page, and at some
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point you will pass the lower boundary of the box.
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Libra Office and Press will, at this point, reduce the font size to keep everything in
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the box, and it will continue to do that as long as you keep adding bullet points.
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That makes it very easy, right?
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Well my view is that this is a sign you are trying to cram too much content onto a single
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slide.
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If you are doing a presentation in a room where people may be ten meters or more from
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the screen, small fonts will kill you.
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I always aim at three to four points per slide when using bullets, or put another way.
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The default font size is 32 point, and I try to keep to that if at all possible.
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One of the reasons I mostly create my presentations in a blank presentation view, instead of as
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an outline, is that it is easy to keep an eye on this kind of thing as I go.
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But if you do start with an outline, make sure you review the presentation in normal view
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to be sure you have not created a problem here.
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Once you are finished with this slide, click the slide button to get the next slide.
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You will get another copy of the same slide with the bullet points, and again that is the
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default.
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You can, and I have done so, create an entire presentation of thirty slides using just this
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one slide type.
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But if you want to use a different slide type, you have two ways to go about it.
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First, there is a drop down arrow next to the slide button.
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If you click that arrow, you will see that you have twelve slide types to choose from.
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There is also an option that says duplicate slide.
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This would let you add a copy of the slide you are on, and it would be an exact duplicate
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with the same text, images, or whatever.
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The other way you can change the slide type, while the slide is in the workspace is
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to go to the properties layout section in the sidebar and click on the slide type you want.
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The slide in the workspace will immediately change.
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This works great if the slide is blank.
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But if it already has content, changing the slide type may screw up the content.
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That is something to keep in mind.
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So what are the summary points?
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Number one, I work in blank presentation mode most of the time, but I still think having
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at least a rough outline in mind before starting is a good idea.
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I have a lot of practice at this, including experience teaching a remote course where
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all of the material was delivered via presentations that were presented over video.
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And I still take time to get things sorted out before I begin to write and revise frequently.
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At this point, everything is simply black text on a white background.
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This is not the time to worry about fonts, backgrounds, colors, or all of the other things.
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You need to get your content correct first.
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Once that is done, there is plenty of time to add those other things, and we will discuss
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that later.
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Point three, don't overfill your slides.
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This will only annoy your audience, and that is not a good thing.
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Look for ways to revise how you are presenting the material so that you can break a long
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slide into several slides.
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Even just cutting it in half and calling the first slide number one in the second slide
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number two is not a bad thing, and preferable to 12 point font on a slide.
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Number four, practice and revise.
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An iterative process can be really helpful.
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Actually practice giving your presentation and note where it becomes awkward.
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That means revision time.
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Some jobs would spend hours doing this, which is why he was a recognized master presenter.
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It never hurts to do a dry run where you can.
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For instance, when I prepare a talk that I am going to give at a conference, I frequently
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will look for an opportunity to present that same talk at a Linux users group a few months
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ahead of time.
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That gives me a chance to actually present it and see how people react and respond and
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make any adjustments before I actually go to the conference.
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You can never be too well prepared.
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If you do everything we've talked about, you will already have an above average presentation.
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But I did promise we would get to the visual aspects, and that will be the next tutorial.
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So this is Ahuka signing off for Hacker Public Radio and reminding you as always to support
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free software.
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You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday.
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Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contribute link to find
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out how easy it really is.
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Hacker Public Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the Infonomicon Computer Club
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and is part of the binary revolution at binrev.com.
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If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment on
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the website or record a follow-up episode yourself, unless otherwise stated, today's show
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is released under Creative Commons, Attribution, ShareLite, 3.0 license.
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