Shrinks the text to make it fit in the text box. Resize Shape to Fit Text: Enlarges the text box to make the text fit inside it. Follow these steps to tell PowerPoint how or whether to fit text in text boxes: Select the text box and Right-click the text box and choose Format Shape. You see the Format Shape dialog box. Click the Text Box category. Next, let me tell you how to create a scrolling textbox in PowerPoint 2010. Step 1 Add the “Developer” tab to the functional area Because in PowerPoint 2010 the “Developer” tab is not added to the functional area by default. In this case, you should first add the “Developer” tab to the functional area.
![How to make margins for a textbox on powerpoint for a mac How to make margins for a textbox on powerpoint for a mac](/uploads/1/2/5/6/125625262/183438211.png)
Internal margins control the amount of blank space between the perimeter (edge) and the actual text within all three types of text containers -,. Although these margins are similar to the margins of pages in a word-processing document like Microsoft Word, there is a significant difference. Each text container has its own individual margins set, and you can have entirely different margins for one or more text containers, even if they reside on the same slide. In this tutorial, we will explore how to set and change these internal margins for text within a text container in PowerPoint 2011.
![Margins Margins](http://www.indezine.com/products/powerpoint/learn/textandfonts/images/textlayoutoptions2011_02.jpg)
It's always recommended that the margin settings should be done on the slide itself only for text boxes (and shapes) rather than individual text placeholders. You can set margins for text placeholders too, but best practices dictate that you make these changes for text placeholders within the - thus providing a consistent look to successive slides in your presentation. Follow these steps to set a text container’s internal margins:. Open any slide which has a text container - click on the edge of the text container so that it shows a solid line with selection handles on its perimeter, which indicates that it has been selected. In Figure 1, you can see a. Figure 1: Text box selected.
Right-click to access the contextual menu you see in Figure 2 - select the Format Text option (refer to Figure 2 again). Figure 2: Format Text option selected.
This will open the Format Text dialog box (see Figure 3). Make sure you choose Text Box option within the sidebar of this dialog box (refer to Figure 3 again). Figure 3: Internal margin options within the Format Text dialog box Within the Format Text dialog box, locate the Internal Margin section (highlighted in red within Figure 3).
This section provides options to tweak the space around the text within the text container. You'll find four separate boxes to enter values for the internal margins - these are Left, Top, Right, and Bottom. Enter the values or use the up and down arrows to change the margin value in each of these four boxes. Figure 4 shows the difference between the text box with default internal margins and the same text box with changed internal margins - you can see the original text box on the left, and the text box on the right has larger margins. Figure 4: Variations of the same text box with default and changed internal margin settings. Right below the Internal Margin setting boxes, you'll find the Wrap text in shape check-box - when selected, this causes text to flow within the.
In Figure 5, the shape shown towards left contains the text that is not wrapped, and the same shape shown towards right contains the wrapped text. Figure 5: Text within the shape when not wrapped and same shape with text wrapped See Also.
By default, the shapes you insert in PowerPoint use the first accent color in your presentation's theme. This might be a terrible choice, so with a single right-click you can change the default shape style to be used in future slides, or even future presentations.
In the same way, we can set the default font choices in a textbox. For more tutorials like this one, subscribe to the Everyday Office channel! Everyday Office is the publishing arm of Knack Training , bringing you free tutorials every day on YouTube and the blog about Microsoft Office, SharePoint, OneDrive, Teams, and Office 365; Adobe Acrobat DC and Creative Cloud; Google Suite for Business; Presentation Design and Delivery; Data Visualization and Design Theory for Business Communication. Neil Malek is a 20-year veteran software instructor who is principal at Knack Training, a software training company from Orlando, FL.