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PowerPoint and Presenting News
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Learn PowerPoint 2016 for Mac
Slide Sorter View

Most of the time, you may work on a single slide in your PowerPoint presentation, but there are times when you want to copy, duplicate, reorder, or even delete a bunch of slides. It's in scenarios like these that you will encounter PowerPoint 2016's Slide Sorter view. Among the various views available in PowerPoint 2016 for Mac to play and edit your presentations, we have already covered both Normal view and Outline view. Although Slide Sorter view does not let you edit
individual slide objects, it does let you work with the whole slide itself. Any edits made will influence one or more slides, depending upon your selection.
Normal View

PowerPoint 2016 for Mac continues to providing several views that enable you to view and edit your slides. Unarguably, Normal view is the default and most often used view. This view displays one slide at a time in the Slide Area, and is used mainly for editing and creating slides, and shows PowerPoint's typical tri-pane interface that includes the Slides Pane, the Slide Area, and the Notes Pane.
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Learn PowerPoint 2013 for Windows
Working with RGB Colors

We already explored what Color Models are, and we then looked at the RGB color model that uses three primary colors: Red, Green, and Blue to mix and create almost 16 million colors. All RGB colors have values for all the three colors that you mix: R, G, and B. Assuming someone has provided you with an RGB value, and asked you to add a rectangle of that color to a slide, then how do you proceed within PowerPoint? Let’s learn from this tutorial.
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Learn PowerPoint 2010 for Windows
Working with RGB Colors

Let us assume that someone has provided you with an RGB value for a color, and has asked you to add a rectangle of that color to a slide. Then how do you proceed? Before proceeding, make sure you know what RGB colors are, and specifically what the three values: R, G, and B indicate. Once you have these R, G, and B values, you can easily apply that color within PowerPoint. For now, let us imagine that you have the following RGB color values that you need to fill your rectangle with.
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Learn PowerPoint 2011 for Mac
Working with RGB Colors

PowerPoint provides an option to fill any shape with a solid fill color easily. But what if you want a specific color to be filled? Maybe you need to use specific colors that are part of your company's corporate identity. In that case, you will need to get an RGB value of that color. So what is RGB? RGB stands for Red, Green, and Blue, and each of these three colors possesses a value within the RGB color model. Let's now imagine that you have a particular RGB value that you want
to use as a fill for any shape; follow the steps below to learn how to add a rectangle of the color.
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