Office 2021 for Macs For Dummies. Bob LeVitus
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Название: Office 2021 for Macs For Dummies

Автор: Bob LeVitus

Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited

Жанр: Программы

Серия:

isbn: 9781119840473

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ a document to your computer in an appropriate file format

       Turn on and manage the AutoRecover function

      To create a new, blank document in Word choose File ⇒ New Document; in Excel choose File ⇒ New; and in PowerPoint choose File ⇒ New Presentation. To create a new, blank document in Outlook, choose File ⇒ New and then select E-Mail, Meeting, Appointment, Group, Contact, Contact List, Task, Note, Email from Template, Folder, or Main Window from the submenu.

      You have three ways to open an existing Office document file:

       From Finder: Double-click any document created by an Office app, and that app launches and opens the document.

       Choose File ⇒ Open: Use this command after you’ve launched whichever Office app you want to work in. (You can also press ⌘ +O.)

       Use the gallery: The gallery multipurpose dialog can serve as the starting point for new Office documents and as a quick way to find documents you’ve worked on recently. To open the gallery, choose File ⇒ New from Template (or press ⌘ +Shift+P).

      Using the gallery to open templates or recent documents

Snapshot shows starting a new, blank document in the gallery or choose a document template or theme.

      FIGURE 3-8: You can start a new, blank document in the gallery or choose a document template or theme.

If the gallery doesn’t appear automatically when you launch an Office app, choose File ⇒ New from Template (or press ⌘ +Shift+P) to open it.

      The gallery dialog contains the following elements:

       New: Click New in the left pane to see templates and categories. In Figure 3-8, the selected category is Newsletter.

       Recent: Click Recent in the left pane to see a list of the most recent documents you’ve opened, listed according to the last time they were opened.Many users like to have the gallery open automatically when they launch an Office program, which is how its set by default. If for some strange reason the gallery doesn’t always open automatically when you launch an Office app, here’s what to do: Open the app’s preferences, click the General icon at the top of the Preferences window, and then click the Show Document/Workbook/Presentation Gallery When Opening Word/Excel/PowerPoint check box.

       Shared: Click Shared in the left pane to see documents, workbooks, or presentations that are being shared with you by others.

       Open: Click Open to browse local and online storage to find and open documents quickly.

       Home: Click Home to view a mashup of the New, Recent, and Shared tabs.

       Search field: Type a word or words in the search field at the top right of the gallery window to find files that contain that word or those words.

      Finally, if you don’t see anything you want to open in the gallery, click Cancel. The gallery window disappears, but the app remains open (though it may have no document windows open at this time). To close the gallery and quit the app, choose File ⇒ Quit.

      Saving a document

      Saving a document in any Office app works the same way as in almost every other Mac program. The unique Office wrinkles involve saving files automatically and choosing a file format for your saved document.

      We start by describing how to save a file. Saving a document file involves two tasks: saving the file for the first time and resaving the file every so often.

      Part I: The initial save

      

If your Save As dialog doesn’t look similar to Figure 3-9, click the disclosure arrow to the right of the current folder’s name to expand it.

      To save the file, navigate to the folder you want to save the document in (the current folder is Word Docs in Figure 3-9) and name the file (Getting Started in Figure 3-9).

      Part II: The resave

      After you save a file for the first time, you’re not done with saving — not by a long shot. You still need to resave the document often so that if the app or your Mac crashes, you lose only the work you’ve done since the last time you saved.

      This part is much easier than Part I. After you save and name a file, for subsequent saves, you merely need to choose File ⇒ Save or press ⌘ +S.

Save your file. Do it early. Do it often. Just do it, and do it a lot.

Snapshot of the Save As dialog for a Word document.

      FIGURE 3-9: The Save As dialog for a Word document.

      DECIDING WHICH FILE FORMAT TO CHOOSE WHEN SAVING A DOCUMENT

      The File Formats pop-up menu in the Save dialog lets you choose the file format for the file you’re about to save. In Figure 3-9, Word is about to save this document in the default Word file format (.docx). The default format in Excel is .xlxs and for PowerPoint it’s .pptx.

      The default file formats for Office documents since 2007/2008 are four-letter acronyms (FLAs) that end with the letter x. Before that, they were three-letter acronyms (TLAs) that did not end with an x (for example, the default for Word was .doc). The x indicates that the newer format is based on eXtensible Markup Language, or XML, an open standard for encoding documents in a machine-readable form.

      Those default formats are perfectly fine most of the time, but occasionally you may want (or need) to use a different format. If someone you're sending a document to is unable to open it, try saving a copy of the document in an older format, such as .doc, .xls, or .ppt. Or if the person doesn't need to edit the document, perhaps a PDF would work best.

      SAVE VERSUS SAVE AS

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