Microsoft 365 Portable Genius
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About this ebook
Power up your proficiency with this genius guide to popular Microsoft 365 apps
Do you want to make your Microsoft 365 account a productivity behemoth? Do you want to squeeze every last bit of awesome from Word, Excel, and PowerPoint and learn a little more about Outlook, too? Microsoft 365 Portable Genius has got you covered. A seasoned tech expert and trainer, author Lisa A. Bucki shows you how to build Word documents, Excel workbooks, and PowerPoint presentations the right way, as well as how to use high-impact design techniques to make your documents pop.
This book answers 11 key questions about how to make the most of Microsoft 365, providing genius tips as it leads you through the essentials. You’ll learn how to:
- Tackle common skills like creating files, adding basic content, navigating in a file, making selections, copying and moving content, and saving files
- Build a new Word document by using outlining, bullets and numbering, columns, and other features for creating and enhancing content
- Enhance Excel workbook files by organizing data on different sheets, filling entries, creating range names, and entering powerful, accurate formulas
- Develop a PowerPoint presentation by choosing the right layout for each slide and adding content to placeholders, and then transform it into an on-screen show with transitions and animations
- Add punchy design and branding by using text formatting, themes, and graphics in your files
- Use lists, tables, and charts to make data easier to interpret
- Create, send, reply to, and organize email in Outlook, as well as add contacts Share file contents on paper or digitally
- Check out the Online Bonus Appendix at Wiley for more genius coverage of topics including additional Excel formula review techniques, essential Excel functions, theme colors and fonts changes, and WordArt
Whether you have used Office in the past or are new to its subscription successor Microsoft 365, Microsoft 365 Portable Genius provides the expert guidance you need to work smarter in Microsoft 365.
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Microsoft 365 Portable Genius - Lisa A. Bucki
Microsoft 365™
PORTABLE GENIUS
Lisa A. Bucki
Logo: WileyCopyright © 2021 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Indianapolis, Indiana
Published simultaneously in Canada
ISBN: 978‐1‐119‐76367‐3
ISBN: 978‐1‐119‐76511‐0 (ebk)
ISBN: 978‐1‐119‐76373‐4 (ebk)
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning or otherwise, except as permitted under Sections 107 or 108 of the 1976 United States Copyright Act, without either the prior written permission of the Publisher, or authorization through payment of the appropriate per‐copy fee to the Copyright Clearance Center, 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923, (978) 750‐8400, fax (978) 646‐8600. Requests to the Publisher for permission should be addressed to the Permissions Department, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 111 River Street, Hoboken, NJ 07030, (201) 748‐6011, fax (201) 748‐6008, or online at www.wiley.com/go/permissions.
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Trademarks: Wiley and the Wiley logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of John Wiley & Sons, Inc. and/or its affiliates, in the United States and other countries, and may not be used without written permission. Microsoft 365 is a trademark of Microsoft Corporation. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. is not associated with any product or vendor mentioned in this book.
Logo: WileyAbout the Author
icon trainer, and content expert, Lisa A. Bucki has been educating others about computers, software, business, and personal growth topics since 1990. She has written and contributed to dozens of books and multimedia works, in addition to providing marketing and training services to her clients and writing online tutorials. Bucki is co‐founder of 1x1 Media, LLC (www.1x1media.com), an independent publisher of books and courses focused on how‐to topics for entrepreneurs, startup founders, makers, and other business professionals.
Acknowledgments
icon up the writing of Excel® Portable Genius and this book, my husband and I were deeply grieving the loss of two of our beloved dogs, Jack Black and Tucker, in a little more than three months' time. Associate Publisher Jim Minatel, Senior Managing Editor Pete Gaughan, Project Manager Kezia Endsley, and Technical Editor Joyce Nielsen—all of whom I consider both friends and colleagues—reacted with kindness, patience, support, and professionalism. I thank them for being wonderful human beings in addition to top professionals.
I would like to also thank additional team members for their excellent work on this project, including Copy Editor Kim Wimpsett, Content Refinement Specialist Saravanan Dakshinamurthy, Proofreader Louise Watson, and all the other Wiley employees or partners who had a direct or indirect role in this undertaking.
My gratitude also eternally flows to my excellent and patient husband, Steve Poland, and all of our beloved furry dog children.
Introduction
icon apps designed to work together, such as Microsoft 365, offer many pros, including a common user interface, similar commands and features, and a robust set of tools that enables you to communicate effectively and explore your creativity to the max. Even so, some users can find the hundreds—if not thousands—of choices and features to be a little intimidating.
Microsoft 365 Portable Genius aims to help you answer 11 key questions you may come up against when using the top four Microsoft 365 apps—Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook. The book covers the features that you need to know, along with some others that you should want to know. I try to get right to the point in describing features and steps so you can power through, problem‐solve on your own, and free up time for other activities.
A few special elements provide guardrails and inspiration. Notes help you delve a bit deeper into some topics, Cautions give advice and help you steer clear of problems, and Genius icons convey the pro tips that will make you more efficient, more productive, and (I daresay) more impressive in the results that you crank out from the Microsoft 365 apps.
I need to mention one last item from the need to know
category before you dive in to Chapter 1. The screenshots for the figures in this book were shot at a low 1024 x 768 resolution to enhance their final appearance within the book's format. Most users now have their screens set to a much higher resolution, so you may see differences between the figures on your screen and those in the book, particularly with regard to the appearance of the ribbon. Also, users with touchscreen systems may see additional screen options and features not shown in the book's figures. Finally, there may be variations in screen features, depending on the type of Microsoft 365 subscription you have and your update cycle.
Thank you, reader, for adding Microsoft 365 Portable Genius to your library. You can find more bonus material in the Online Bonus Appendix for this book, available at www.wiley.com/go/ms365portablegenius.
How Do I Start Using Microsoft 365?
iconSchematic illustration of the Microsoft 365 applications.The Microsoft 365 applications, or apps, are easy to navigate yet loaded with powerful features designed to save you time and work. The core apps this book covers—Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook—share similar commands and procedures, meaning skills learned in one app translate smoothly to the other apps. Dialing in on all the basics will enable you to spend more time developing content. This chapter introduces you to the must know
skills for your work in Microsoft 365, including essential command and interface navigation features, key techniques for creating and working with files, making selections, copying and moving information, and proofing content.
Starting and Exiting an App
Taking a Look Around
Working with Files
Typing in a Word Document
Making Your First Cell Entries in Excel
Adding Slide Content in PowerPoint
Making and Working with Selections
Refining Your Content
Saving and Closing a File
Starting and Exiting an App
Windows 10 gives you a few options for starting a program so that you can get to work. You may already have your preference for how to start up, but if not, you can try one of these methods:
Start button. Click the Start button at the left end of the Windows taskbar. Move the mouse pointer over the right edge of the list of programs in the Start menu so that a scroll bar expands, and then use the scroll bar or the scroll wheel on your mouse to scroll down until you see the Microsoft 365 app that you want to start, such as Word, in the list. Then choose the app name. You also can pin a larger tile for starting an app to the right side of the Start menu. Right‐click the app name in the list of Start menu programs, and choose Pin to Start. Then you can open the Start menu and click the large tile. If you need to remove the tile later, right‐click it, and choose Unpin from Start.
Windows logo key. Press the Windows logo key on your keyboard. Press the down arrow on your keyboard as needed until the app name is selected, and then press Enter.
Search box. Click in the Search box to the right of the Start button on the taskbar. If a tile for the app appears in the Top Apps section, click it. If not, start typing the app name, such as Excel, and then choose the app when it appears under Best Match, as shown in Figure 1.1.
Snapshot of choosing the app name when using Windows Search to start a Microsoft 365 app.1.1 Choose the app name when using Windows Search to start a Microsoft 365 app.
Additionally, if you choose Office from the Start menu, an Office window with icons for all your apps opens. You can click an app's icon to be prompted to create a document and open the app, and you can leave this window open to launch other Microsoft 365 apps as needed.
GeniusIf using the Start menu to launch a Microsoft 365 app isn't for you, then you can pin a button for the app to the taskbar. With the app open, right‐click its button on the taskbar, and then choose Pin to Taskbar. Click the pinned button on the taskbar to start the program. If you decide you want to unpin the button, right‐click it on the taskbar and choose Unpin from Taskbar.
When Word, Excel, or PowerPoint open, they prompt you to create a new document or open an existing one. (Outlook works a little differently when you start it.) The later section called Working with Files
provides more details about those choices. For now, you could just click the Blank Document, Blank Workbook, or Blank Presentation thumbnail to create a new file.
When you've finished all your work for the day, you should close or exit the program. You could shut down Windows without closing open apps, but it's better to close the app first to ensure you've saved all your work. As when starting an app, you have these options for closing or exiting the program:
Click the Close (X) button at the upper‐right corner of the screen.
Press Alt+F4.
To close the current file without exiting the app, click the File tab near the upper‐left corner of the window, and then choose Close. If you have a file with unsaved work open and exit the app or close the file, a message box asks whether you want to save changes to the file. You can click the Save or Don't Save button as needed.
CautionIf you have multiple Word, Excel, or PowerPoint files open or multiple Outlook windows open, closing one of them doesn't close down the program overall. You have to close every open file or window to make sure you've completely exited the program.
Taking a Look Around
You interact with the Microsoft 365 apps through their user interfaces or UIs. Microsoft specifically designs the user interface in each of the Microsoft 365 apps to have similar features, making it easier to perform similar tasks from app to app. The apps still have their differences, which I'll highlight in the areas where I cover the individual apps. Let's start first, however, with the UI features that the apps have in common.
NoteThe Account (or Office Account in Outlook) choice on the File tab takes you to a screen where you can sign in and out of your Microsoft 365 subscription and manage updates to the apps, among other choices. The Options choice on the File tab opens an Options dialog box where you can change settings affecting how the app appears and behaves.
Reviewing key screen features
The common interface features in the Microsoft 365 apps enable you to identify the file, give commands, work with the content in your documents, view status information, and change the document view. Figure 1.2 illustrates these common features. (I'll cover screen features specific to the individual apps throughout the book as needed.)
Here's what you need to know about the screen features shown in Figure 1.2:
Title bar. The title bar identifies the name of the current file and holds other tools.
Quick Access Toolbar. Found at the left end of the title bar, the Quick Access Toolbar (QAT) offers Save, Undo, and Redo buttons by default. The Undo and Redo buttons become active after you start performing actions. Clicking the down arrow at the right end of the QAT opens the Customize Quick Access Toolbar menu, where you can choose the name of another button that you want to add to the QAT.
Ribbon. The ribbon below the title bar uses tabs to organize the majority of the commands that you'll use in your apps. Click a ribbon tab to see its commands. The names along the bottom of the ribbon identify commands that are grouped together because they have related or similar functions. In most cases, you click a button on the ribbon to choose a command, though clicking a button with a drop‐down list arrow on it opens a list of additional choices. Still other ribbon buttons are split, with both a regular button on the top and a down arrow on the bottom part of the button. Clicking the top half of a split button executes the command immediately, while clicking the bottom part with the arrow opens a list of choices. Other buttons are split the other way, with the main button on the left and a drop‐down list arrow on the right. Pressing the Alt key displays letters and numbers, sometimes called keytips, that you can press to choose a ribbon tab and then a command.
Snapshot of working with the tools in Microsoft 365 apps.1.2 You will work with these tools in Microsoft 365 apps.
NoteI'll use a type of shorthand throughout the book to tell you which ribbon command to choose, giving the tab, group, and specific button. For example, if I say Choose Review ➔ Proofing ➔ Thesaurus,
it means to click the Review tab on the ribbon, look for the Proofing group of commands, and in that group, click Thesaurus. Some command sequences can be longer if a list or menu appears.
Dialog box launcher. Some groups on the ribbon include a small button called a dialog box launcher in the lower‐right corner. Clicking one of these buttons opens a dialog box with more detailed choices, such as the Font or Format Cells dialog box.
Mouse pointer. When you're using the mouse in various apps, the mouse pointer changes shape often to cue you when it's in the correct position to perform a particular action. By default, when the mouse pointer is over the document in Word, the pointer resembles an I‐beam with lines of text beside it, as shown in Figure 1.2. However, it may change to a white arrow, a two‐headed arrow, and other shapes. The default mouse pointer in Excel is a bold white plus, but at other times it changes to a black plus, a split black arrow, and more. PowerPoint and Outlook use the white arrow and a plain I‐beam as the main app pointers, but you may see other mouse pointers in those apps, too.
Status bar. This area below the main work area displays status information and has tools for changing the zoom that I'll cover shortly.
NoteThe more recent Microsoft 365 app versions have made it easier to get help about a feature or task. Make sure your computer is connected to the Internet to receive the maximum results, and then press F1 or choose Help ➔ Help ➔ Help to open a Help pane at the right. Enter a command name, task, or other search keywords, and then press Enter to see matching results. You also can use Microsoft Search (Alt+Q) in the title bar to search for help.
Changing views
The View tab on the ribbon enables you to change the view and turn some view features on and off. The default view for Word, Print Layout, was shown in Figure 1.2. The default view in Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook is called Normal. Figure 1.3 shows the View tab in Excel as an example.
Snapshot of using the View tab choices to adjust screen appearance.1.3 Use the View tab choices to adjust screen appearance.
Generally speaking, the View tab in each of the apps has a main group with the overall view choices, plus additional groups with other settings. Here's the name of the group with the overall view choices for each app, plus a briefing on the available views:
Views group in Word. Word's default Print Layout view approximates how the document will look when printed in hard copy, showing margins, spacing between pages, headers and footers, and so on. It also includes Web Layout view so you can see how the document would look when published as a web page. Outline view, which you will learn more about in Chapter 2, enables you to organize or reorganize a document. Draft view shows just the text, without any of the features in Print Layout view. Finally, Read Mode hides most of Word's screen features, so you can read a document more easily.
Workbook Views group in Excel. In addition to the default Normal view, which is shown later in this chapter, Excel offers Page Break Preview view. Use it when you want to print and think you might need to adjust how the contents break between separate pages. The Page Layout view not only shows page breaks, but also shows how headers and footers will appear when printed.
Presentation Views group in PowerPoint. Beyond the default Normal view, this group in the PowerPoint View tab has an Outline View choice, like Word. It also has a Slide Sorter view for rearranging the order of the slides, or pages, in the file. The Notes Page view enables you to see a speaker notes layout for presentation slides. As in Word, you can choose the Reading View to see the presentation without app tools getting in the way.
Current View group in Outlook. Even though Outlook has a Normal view and a Reading view, this group doesn't offer those choices. Instead, you can choose Change View to adjust aspects of how messages are displayed, or View Settings to change details such as which columns of message information display.
NoteThe buttons near the right end of the status bar (refer to Figure 1.2) also enable you to change between views. In Outlook, these buttons are the only way to change between Normal View and Reading View.
You also can tinker with whether the ribbon is fully visible. The small up arrow button in the lower‐right corner of the ribbon is called the Collapse the Ribbon button. You can click it or press Ctrl+F1 to hide everything but the ribbon tabs, allowing more of the file's contents to appear on‐screen. When you need to choose a command, just click a tab to expand the ribbon temporarily, choose the desired button or item, and then continue working. The ribbon will collapse again on its own. To return the ribbon to its normal appearance and function, click a ribbon tab, and then click the Pin the Ribbon button—it has a pushpin on it—in the lower‐right corner of the ribbon or press Ctrl+F1 again. You also can double‐click a ribbon tab to collapse the ribbon or pin it back open.
The button in the lower‐right corner of the Outlook ribbon looks like the Collapse the Ribbon button in the other apps, but its name is Switch Ribbons. Clicking the button toggles between a one‐line Simplified Ribbon or the Classic Ribbon that looks like the ribbon in Word, Excel, and PowerPoint.
Zooming
Today's trend of computers offering ever‐higher screen resolutions has its pros and cons. While graphics and video look gorgeous in hi‐res, screen features and content in business‐oriented programs can look small and difficult to read. Whether you've forgotten your glasses or just have eyestrain from a full day of screen time, increasing the zoom or zooming in can make screen contents easier to read. On the other hand, decreasing the zoom or zooming out allows more of the file's contents to appear on‐screen at once, which can be handy in some situations. For example, you might want to zoom out when working in Excel to show more rows and columns, which would make it easier to select a large set of data for a chart. Or, you might want to zoom in when performing design tasks in Word or PowerPoint, such as aligning graphic objects, and then zoom back out to see how your changes look in context with the rest of the contents.
The Zoom group of the View tab holds choices for changing the zoom. Word offers the most preset zoom choices, enabling you to zoom to One Page, Multiple Pages, or Page Width size. In Excel, you can select an area on the worksheet and then click the Zoom to Selection button in that group so the selection will fill the screen, usually by zooming in. PowerPoint has a Fit to Window choice that zooms the slide in or out as needed to fill the available space on‐screen. To return to the normal zoom in Word and Excel, click the 100% button in the group. Clicking the Zoom button in Word, Excel, or PowerPoint opens the Zoom dialog box, which enables you to choose a preset zoom percentage or enter your own setting in the Percent text