Digital Documentation Grade 10 Notes
Digital Documentation Grade 10 Notes
1) Page styles include margins, headers and footers, borders and backgrounds.
3) Character styles affect selected text within a paragraph, such as the font and size of text,
or bold and italic formats.
5) Numbering styles apply similar alignment, numbering or bullet characters, and fonts to
numbered or bulleted lists.
6) Cell styles include fonts, alignment, borders, background and cell protection.
8) Presentation styles include attributes for font, indents, spacing, alignment, and tabs.
2. The Styles and Formatting window shows the types of styles available for the OpenOffice.
3. Click on any one of the icons to display a list of styles in a particular category.
4. Position the insertion point in the paragraph, frame, or page, and then double-click on the
name of the style which you want to apply.
4. How to Apply Style using Fill Format mode
1) Open the Styles and Formatting window and select the style you want to apply.
3) To apply a paragraph, page, or frame style, hover the mouse over the paragraph, page,
or frame and click.
NOTE : Fill Format mode is quite useful when you need to format many scattered
paragraphs, cells, or other items with the same style.
a) Open the Styles and Formatting window and choose the type of style you want to create.
c) Click on the New Style from Selection icon from the Styles and Formatting window.
d) Type a name for the new style and Click OK to save the new style.
Select some text and drag it to the Styles and Formatting window. If Paragraph Styles are
active, the paragraph style will be added to the list. If Character Styles are active, the
character style will be added to the list.
OpenOffice.org provides several ways to modify styles (both the predefined styles and
custom styles that you create):
A) Updating A Style From A Selection : To update a style from a selection follow the
following steps:
2. Select an item from the document whose format you want to adopt as a style.
3. In the Styles and Formatting window, select the style you want to update , then click on
the arrow next to the New Style from Selection icon and click on Update Style.
5. Click OK.
Images can be added to a document in several ways: by inserting an image file, directly from
a graphics program or a scanner, or from the Open Office Gallery.
When the image is in a file stored on the computer, you can insert it into an Open Office
document using either of the following methods :
1. Open a file browser window and locate the image you want to insert.
2. Drag the image into the Writer document and drop it where you want it to appear.
1. Click in the Open Office document where you want the image to appear.
2. Choose Insert > Picture > From File from the menu bar.
3. On the Insert Picture dialog , select the file to be inserted and click Open.
b. In the source document, select the image and press Ctrl + C to copy image.
c. Switch to the target document and place the cursor where the image is to be inserted.
If a scanner is connected to your computer Open Office can call the scanning application
and inserted the scanned item into the document. To start this procedure, select Insert >
Picture > Scan > Select Source.
a) To open the Gallery, click on the Gallery icon or choose Tools > Gallery
c) Drag image from the Gallery into the Writer document or right-click on the picture and
choose Insert>Copy
When you insert a new image, you may need to modify it to suit the document. We can
modify image by using Picture toolbar, resizing, cropping etc
When you insert an image or select one already present in the document, the Picture toolbar
appears. You can set it by clicking View > Toolbars > Picture. Two other toolbars can be
opened from this one: the Graphic Filter toolbar and Color Toolbar.
From these three toolbars, you can apply small corrections to the graphic or obtain special
effects.
Graphics mode : You can change color images to grayscale by selecting the image and then
selecting Grayscale from the Graphics mode list
Flip vertically or horizontally : To flip an image vertically or horizontally, select the image, and
then click the relevant icon.
Filters : Following Table provides a short description of the available filters. Feel free to
experiment with the different filters and filters settings. You can undo all the changes by
pressing Ctrl+Z or Alt+Backspace or by selecting Edit > Undo.
3. Cropping Images :
When you are only interested in a section of the image for the purpose of your document,
you may wish to crop (cut off) parts of it. To start cropping the image, right click on it and
select Picture from the pop-up menu. In the Picture dialog box, select the Crop page
Keep scale / Keep image size : When Keep scale is selected (default), cropping the image
does not change the scale of the picture. When Keep image size is selected, cropping
produces enlargement , shrinking , or distortion of the image so that the image size remains
constant.
3. Resizing Image :
Steps to resize the image in Writer are –
Click the picture, to show the green resizing handles. Position the pointer over one of the
green resizing handles. Click and drag to resize the picture.
Rotating a Picture : Writer does not provide a tool for rotating a picture; however, there is a
simple workaround:
Open a new Draw or Impress document. Insert the image you want to rotate. Select the
image and select the Rotate icon from the Drawing toolbar. Rotate the image as desired.
Select and Copy the rotated image and paste it in Writer document.
We can draw the object using drawing toolbar by clicking View > Toolbars > Drawing. Steps
to To use a drawing tool are :
Click in the document where you want to insert the object. Select the tool from the Drawing
toolbar. Click and drag to create the drawing object.
After inserting the object You can change the properties (fill color, line type and weight,
anchoring, and others) of the drawing object using the Drawing Object Properties toolbar.
Select one object, then hold down the Shift key and select the others you want to include in
the group.
Choose Format > Group > Group from the menu bar or right-click and choose Group >
Group from the pop-up menu.
When you add a graphic to a text document, you need to choose how to position it with
respect to the text and other graphics. Positioning of a graphic is controlled by four settings
3. Anchoring refers to the reference point for the graphics. This point could be the page, or
frame. An image always has an anchor point.
4. Text wrapping refers to the relation of graphics to the surrounding text, which may wrap
around the graphic on one or both sides.
SESSION : 3 CREATE AND USE TEMPLATE
1. What is Template?
Ans: A template is a model that you use to create other documents. For example, you can
create a template for business reports that has your company’s logo on the first page. New
documents created from this template will all have your company’s logo on the first page.
1. Creating a template from a Document : Steps to create template from a document are –
a) Open a new or existing document of the type you want to make into a template (text
document, spreadsheet, drawing, presentation).
c) From the main menu, choose File > Templates > Save , to open template dialog box.
2. Creating a template using a wizard: Steps to create template using a wizard are –
a) From the main menu, choose File > Wizards >[type of template required]
c) In the last section of the wizard, you can specify the name and location for saving the
template.
From the main menu, choose File > Templates > Organize. The Template Management
dialog opens. In the box on the left, select the folder containing the template that you want to
set as the default, then select the template. Click the Commands button and choose Set As
Default Template from the drop-down menu.
To re-enable Open Office’s Default template for a document type as the default:
In the Template Management dialog, click any folder in the box on the left. Click the
Commands button and choose Reset Default Template from the drop-down menu.
SESSION 4. CREATE AND CUSTOMIZE TABLE OF CONTENTS
Writer’s table of contents feature lets you build an automated table of contents from the
headings in your document. For example, you can use the Heading 1 style for chapter titles
and the Heading 2 and Heading 3 styles for chapter subheadings.
Place the cursor in the document where you want the table of contents to be inserted. Select
Insert > Indexes and Tables > Indexes and Tables Click OK.
Adding A Title : If you’d like the table of contents to have a title, enter it in the Title field.
Protecting Against Manual Changes : To protect the table of contents from being changed
accidentally, check the Protected against manual changes check box.
Use the Entries tab, to format the entries in the table of contents. For each outline level, you
can add and delete elements, such as chapter numbers, and you can also apply character
styles to individual elements.
The Structure line displays the elements for entries in that level. Each button on the
Structure line represents one element:
The E# button represents the chapter number. The E button represents the entry text. The T
button represents a tab stop. The # button represents the page number. The LS button
represents the start of a hyperlink. (This button doesn’t appear on the default Structure line.)
The LE button represents the end of a hyperlink. (This button doesn’t appear on the default
Structure line.)
Deleting Elements : To delete an element from the Structure line, click the button that
represents that element and then press the Delete key on your keyboard.
Adding Elements : To add an element to the Structure line, follow these steps:
Place your cursor in the white field to the left of where you want to insert the element. Click
one of the five buttons that are just below the Structure line. (For example, to add a tab stop,
click the Tab stop button.) A button representing the new element appears on the Structure
line.
Applying Character Styles : To apply a character style to an element on the Structure line:
On the Structure line, click the button that represents the element to which you want to apply
a style. From the Character Style drop-down list, select the desired style. Writer applies the
selected style to the selected element.
Use the Styles tab, to apply paragraph styles to the table of contents. You can apply a
different paragraph style to each outline level of the table.
3. Click the < button to apply the selected paragraph style to the selected outline level.
1) In the Levels list box, select the desired outline level by clicking it.
Use the Background tab, to add color or a graphic to the table background.
Adding Color : To add color to the background of the table of contents, simply click the
desired color in the color grid.
Adding A Graphic : To add a graphic to the background of the table of contents, follow
these steps:
From the As drop-down list, select Graphic. The Background tab displays the graphics
options. Click the Browse button. Find the graphic file that you want to use and then click the
Open button.
In the Type area of the Background tab, choose how you want the background graphic to
appear: To position the graphic in a specific location in the background, select Position. To
stretch the graphic so that it fills the entire background area, select Area. To repeat the
graphic across the entire background area, select Tile
Deleting Color Or Graphics : To delete color or graphics from the table background, follow
these steps:
From the As drop-down list, select Color. Click No Fill on the color grid.
Click anywhere in the table of contents and then right click. The context menu appears.
From the context menu, choose Edit Index/Table. The Insert Index/Table window opens and
you can edit and save the table.
If you add or delete text (so that headings move to different pages) or you add, delete, or
change headings, you need to update the table of contents. To do this
Click anywhere in the table of contents and then right click. The context menu appears.
From the context menu, choose Delete Index/Table. Writer deletes the table of contents.
SESSION 5. IMPLEMENT MAIL MERGE
A mail merge can also be a quick way to take a list of people’s mailing addresses and
generate labels or envelopes with the address for a different person on each label or
envelope.
2. Save the document with the appropriate name with extension .odt or .ods
3. Write out the text that will be going to everyone, and plan where you want the fields.
2. Select the type of data: spreadsheet data, text file data or the type of database you’re
using like Access or mySQL.
3. Click Next
2. Once you have the letter then insert the fields from the database at specific position by
dragging the fields.
3. If you want a field in the letter twice, you can drag it twice.
5. The last step is to either print the letter to a printer, or “print” to a Writer file so you can see
all the data merged.
To edit a saved file of mailing labels, open the saved label file in the normal way.
You will be prompted to update all links.
Choose No for the following reason: The first label on the page is termed the “Master Label”
and all other labels are linked to it. If you update the links, then all labels will end up
containing the same data.
Printing Mailing Labels
Before beginning this process, note the brand and type of labels you intend to use. To
prepare mailing labels for printing:
2. On the Options tab, ensure that the Synchronize contents option is selected.
4. Click the Labels tab and move fields from Database field list to Label text area.
5. Choose File > Print. The message shown in appears. Click Yes to print.
6. In the Mail Merge dialog ( ), Click OK to send the labels directly to the printer