Learn Microsoft Office 2019
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Presentation Views using the ribbon

There are five Presentation Views in PowerPoint 2019, as well as three Master Views. Two additional views are available. The first, called the Presenter View, is located on the Slide Show tab. This view allows the presentation to be viewed on two monitors. The audience display will show the presentation without notes, while the speaker can enjoy having access to the slides and notes as well as other great features while presenting. Setting up Presenter View is addressed under its own topic in this book. The other view is the Slide Show View, which is used to show the presentation to the audience. The Slide Show View takes up the whole screen, hiding the program tabs, ribbon, and menu. Use this view to see how your presentation will display to an audience when presenting.

Click on the View tab on the ribbon to access the Presentation Views group, as illustrated in the following screenshot:

We'll get to see the following types of view:

  • Normal View: This allows the user to work on all features of the presentation in one place. This is the main view, where all editing and formatting takes place. It consists of the Slide pane and Notes pane (if active), as illustrated in the following screenshot:
  • Outline View: Use this view to paste a Word outline into a presentation with ease. It is also a really easy way to edit text on presentation slides, as illustrated in the following screenshot:
  • Slide Sorter View: This shows slides in thumbnail view. In this view, you can copy and move slides with ease, reorder slides, and play animations and transitions per slide. A great feature in this view is the ability to organize your presentation into sections (categories), which will be discussed under a separate topic in this book. This view is illustrated in the following screenshot:
  • Notes Page View: This view consists of Notes pane contents, as well as the slide the notes refer to. These notes can be printed out as handouts for the audience. This view is illustrated in the following screenshot:
  • Reading View: This view is not used to present to an audience on a big screen, but rather to someone viewing the presentation on a computer. When using Reading View the screen will display as a window on the screen, with similar controls as viewing the presentation in Slide Show view when presenting to an audience. To exit this view, simply press the Esc key on your keyboard. This view can be seen in the following screenshot:

We will now look at the different options presented to us on the status bar.