Learn about the differences between text placeholders and text boxes in PowerPoint 2010 for Windows. The differences can be significant.
Author: Geetesh Bajaj
Product/Version: PowerPoint 2010 for Windows
OS: Windows XP and higher
We have already covered the concept of differences between text placeholders and text boxes using PowerPoint 2003 and PowerPoint 2007 earlier, and now we will explore the same within PowerPoint 2010. Let us now look at the other two text container types. Aren't text boxes and text placeholders the same? Are they really different? And why should we bother even if they are different? All these are valid questions, and the answers to them form one of the most important foundations in learning to create more structured presentations in PowerPoint.
In PowerPoint slides, text can be found in many places: text placeholders, text boxes, tables, charts, the Notes pane, and more places. However, the text within a text placeholder has characteristics that set it a class apart from all other text. So what exactly is a text placeholder, and how is it different from text within a text box or anywhere else?
Look at Figure 1, which shows you what exactly a text placeholder is within a PowerPoint slide. Also note that only text content within the placeholders is part of the presentation's outline.
Figure 1: Text Placeholders
Let's explore which text shows up as a part of the outline in various Slide Layouts, as marked in Figure 1, above:
A. In a slide that contains a title and subtitle, text contents of both placeholders comprise the outline.
B. In a slide that contains a title and text (as in bulleted or non-bulleted content), text contents of both placeholders comprise the outline.
C. In a slide that has a title with something else such as a chart or a picture, the outline comprises just the title text.
D. In a slide that has only a title, the outline comprises just the title.
To follow this more clearly, you should try this small exercise:
Although this differentiation between text placeholders and text boxes may not sound very significant at first, the more structured you get in your approach in creating better PowerPoint presentations, the more important this foundation concept will appear. So do remember this important rule: always try to put your text content in placeholders rather than mere text boxes as far as you can.
Remember that PowerPoint has slide layouts that have at least two text placeholders, some layouts have even more, and if you want, you can even create your own slide layouts, but that is something we will cover in a subsequent tutorial.
See Also:
Text and Outlines: Text Placeholders vs. Text Boxes in PowerPoint (Index Page)
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