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XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 1 Microsoft Windows XP Object Linking and Embedding Tutorial 8.

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Presentation on theme: "XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 1 Microsoft Windows XP Object Linking and Embedding Tutorial 8."— Presentation transcript:

1 XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 1 Microsoft Windows XP Object Linking and Embedding Tutorial 8

2 XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 2 Creating a WordPad Document Click Start, point to All Programs, point to Accessories, and click WordPad Type content Click Save

3 XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 3 The Clipboard The Clipboard is an area in your computer’s memory that temporarily stores the data you cut or copy

4 XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 4 Cut and Paste Options

5 XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 5 Understanding Object Linking and Embedding (OLE) Object Linking and Embedding (OLE) lets you insert an object into a document and access tools to manipulate the object (usually the tools of the program that were used to create the object) With OLE, you place objects into documents either by embedding them or by linking them

6 XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 6 OLE Terms

7 XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 7 Embedding an Object Using Paste Embedding places a copy of an object into a document and “remembers” which program created the object, although it doesn’t remember the name of the source file The Paste command in the Edit menu uses the Embed or Link method, depending on what is being copied, from where its being copied, and to where you are Pasting it

8 XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 8 Embedded Object

9 XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 9 Resizing an Embedded Object Click the object, if necessary, to select it and place a selection box around it Drag the selection box sizing handles to size the image as desired

10 XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 10 Editing an Embedded Object Right-click the embedded object, point to Object on the shortcut menu, and then click Edit—or double-click the object Edit the object using the source program tools that appear in the destination program window Click outside the selection box to return to the tools of the destination program

11 XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 11 Editing an Embedded Object

12 XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 12 Embedding an Object Using Insert Object Click the place in the destination file where you want to insert the object Click Insert on the menu bar, and then click Object. The Insert Object dialog box opens Click the Create from File option button

13 XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 13 Insert Object Dialog Box

14 XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 14 Controlling the Appearance of an OLE Object Some users prefer to display OLE objects as icons, especially during the draft phases of creating a multimedia document To display an embedded graphic as an icon, right-click the graphic and then click Object Properties on the shortcut menu Click the View tab Click the Display as icon option, and then click the OK button

15 XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 15 Controlling the Appearance of an OLE Object

16 XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 16 Changing a Display Icon Open the icon’s property sheet If necessary, click the tab in the Properties dialog box that contains the Change Icon button Click the Change Icon button Click one of the icons that appears in the Change Icon dialog box Click the OK button in the Change Icon dialog box and in the Properties dialog box

17 XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 17 Changing a Display Icon

18 XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 18 New Icon for Embedded Object

19 XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 19 Using Embedding Methods Paste Special: Using Paste Special allows you to embed the objects or parts of objects in specialized formats. Open the source file, select the object you want to embed, click Edit, and then click Copy. Then open the destination file, click Edit, and then click Paste Special. Select the file format option you want to use, and then click the OK button

20 XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 20 Using Embedding Methods Insert Object: This method is faster than Paste when you are embedding an entire file, because you don’t need to open the source file first. If you need to embed an entire file, such as a graphic image or video clip, click Insert, click Object, and then click Create from File. Locate the file you want to embed, and then click the OK button

21 XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 21 Linking vs. Embedding

22 XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 22 Linking an Object To use Insert Object, click the location in the destination file where you want to insert the object. Then click Insert, click Object, and then click Create from File in the Insert Object dialog box. Next click Browse to open the Browse dialog box, locate and select the file, click the Link check box, and then click the OK button twice

23 XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 23 Linking an Object To use Paste Special, first open the source file and select the information you want to insert. Click Edit and then click Copy. Open the destination file and click the location where you want to insert the object. Click Edit, and then click Paste Special. In the Paste Special dialog box, click Paste Link and then click the OK button

24 XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 24 Updating a Linked Object If the destination file is closed when you change the source file, any linked objects will usually update automatically the next time you open the file If the destination file is open when you change the source file, you have to update it manually, using the Links command

25 XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 25 Links Dialog Box

26 XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 26 Deleting an OLE Object If you insert an OLE object you no longer need, you can delete it from a document the same way you delete text or any other information

27 XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 27 Linking and Playing a Video Clip Link a video clip using Insert Object (the same way you link a graphic).

28 XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 28 Windows XP Multimedia Tools

29 XP Tutorial 8 New Perspectives on Microsoft Windows XP 29 Using Media Player: Media Player Buttons


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