Название: Facebook For Dummies
Автор: Carolyn Abram
Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited
Жанр: Интернет
isbn: 9781119782131
isbn:
Once you get your preview looking the way you want, you can delete the original link (the preview will remain) and use the space above to share your thoughts about your link. When you’re ready to share, click Post.
Adding an emoji
FIGURE 4-15: Emojis help you express everything you feel.
Adding a photo or video
After you select a photo (or photos) you want to add, click Choose or Open. You return to the share box, and you see the photos as they'll appear in your friends’ News Feeds. Hovering the mouse cursor over the photos displays three new buttons. Click the X in the upper-right corner to remove the photos from your post. Select the Edit or Edit All button to crop, rotate, caption, and tag individual photos. Click the Add Photos/Videos button to reopen the interface for selecting photos from your computer. For more information on these options, see Chapter 11.
When you’re happy with the photos you’ve chosen, you can add more text or other information to the post, or simply click Post to share.
Adding a tag
A tag is a way of linking someone or something else to your content on Facebook. Most often, tags are used to let people know who is in a photo, but tags can be used also in status updates to let people know who is with you. People also use tags to bring certain friends’ attention to something they're posting. For example, you might see a status update that says “Who’s up for going hiking? Patrick, Stevie?" Each bolded name links to a friend’s timeline. Additionally, those friends are notified when the post is published.
You can tag someone in your post in two ways. The first is to type the @ symbol (Shift + 2) and begin typing the name of the person you want to tag. Facebook autocompletes as you type. When you see your friend’s name highlighted, press or tap Enter. When you tag someone this way, the tag appears as part of the post, such as “Way better than Moira at singing.”
In addition to people, you can tag Pages. For example, you might want people to know that you're excited about the latest episode of Schitt’s Creek. Type the @ sign and start typing Schitt’s Creek, and you’ll find that it appears in the autocomplete list.
FIGURE 4-16: Tag your friends when they are with you.
Adding what you’re doing or feeling
The information you enter is appended to your post, often with an emoji that further illustrates what you're doing or feeling. Figure 4-17 shows an example of a post with information about what Kara's drinking, with coffee cup emoji to complement her drink of choice. Additionally, if something you're doing has a page or information about it on Facebook, Facebook may add a preview of that information to your post.
FIGURE 4-17: A post with activity information.
You can add only one thing you're doing or feeling to a post, so unfortunately you can't be both feeling joyful and watching Schitt’s Creek at the same time, as far as your posts go.
Checking in with your location information
Showing, not telling, with GIFs