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About this lesson
Align and distribute shapes (and other content) so that they are correctly positioned to quickly balance the content on your slides and prevent the same objects on different slides jumping to different locations during a slideshow.
Lesson versions
Multiple versions of this lesson are available, choose the appropriate version for you:
Exercise files
Download the ‘before’ and ‘after’ PowerPoint presentations from the video tutorial and try the lesson yourself.
Align and Distribute Shapes32.8 KB Align and Distribute Shapes - Complete
32.7 KB
Quick reference
Topic
Aligning and distributing shapes.
When to use
To align or distribute shapes evenly on a slide.
Instructions
- Select a shape on the slide, click the Format tab, and then click the Align drop-down button.
- To align selected shapes with each other, click Align Selected Objects.
- To align selected shapes relative to the slide, click Align to Slide.
- Click the Align menu item based on the alignment result you desire.
- To Distribute shapes:
- Drag a marquee (used to select parts of an image) with the pointer and release to select shapes to distribute.
- To distribute selected shapes with each other, click Align Selected Objects.
- To distribute selected shapes relative to the slide, click Align to Slide.
- Select either Distribute Horizontally or Distribute Vertically.
Also note:
Shapes will distribute vertically or horizontally depending on how they are distributed on the slide before you commence. Align Selected Objects will be unavailable if you do not select more than one object on the slide.
Login to download- 00:04 It’s very important that the elements that you add to a slide be balanced and aligned correctly so that they don’t look like cows that have
- 00:10 walked in off the paddock ready to eat grass on your slide. Now I’ve got 4 objects on the slide that I’ve numbered so that we can see where
- 00:16 they go when we move them. The format tab is available now that I’ve selected them and we’re going to align selected objects, so the objects
- 00:24 themselves will become the reference point. Align left and they all move to the furthermost left object which is number 1. So we go CTRL Z
- 00:37 to undo, align right, I predict they’ll all move to number 4, align top, they will move to number 1, and align bottom, and I imagine they will move
- 00:49 level with number 4, very good. And then align center, PowerPoint has done a calculation between the outermost objects and worked out
- 00:57 roughly where the center is, and the same with align middle. Very good. But we can also move them with the slide as the reference point so
- 01:07 that when we go align left, they all move to the far left of the slide. If we go align right, same thing, align top, same, and align bottom, same.
- 01:21 If we go align center they all move to the perfect center of the slide and if we go align middle they all align to the middle of the slide. Ok, very
- 01:32 simple. Now let’s look at distribute, so if we go align selected objects, distribute horizontally. They’ve moved relative to the outer boundary but
- 01:43 because they’re spatially different vertically, it’s a bit hard to tell so CTRL Z, let’s align to slide, align middle, align selected objects, distribute
- 01:56 horizontally and we can see that they’re all fairly well spaced it’s just that number 3 is behind the other objects, CTRL Z, let’s click the format tab,
- 02:07 distribute vertically and there’s no change and the reason is because they are already aligned, there’s no movement vertically for them to move.
- 02:16 Ok so let’s go relative to the slide. So we go, distribute horizontally, notice that they are indeed evenly spaced. The same gap between
- 02:29 number 1 and the edge of the slide, between each shape and between number 4 and the edge of the slide. Now if I go distribute vertically,
- 02:39 do you know what will happen, I would predict that number 1 will pop to the top of the slide, number 4 will pop to the bottom and they’ll be
- 02:47 distributed evenly. Let’s see what happens. Well, isn’t that interesting. They’ve moved all around, the amount of distance is the same but
- 02:57 if we have a look at them, maybe what we need to do is actually move this one up a little bit, that one, that one, and that one, so that they
- 03:06 are actually already vaguely in that order. So let’s go distribute vertically, that’s very good, let’s go distribute horizontally, very good. Now
- 03:16 they are indeed evenly spaced on the slide. So the order from which a shape will start can determine what happens when they are aligned
- 03:25 or distributed. So let’s select all of those finally with our mouse, I’m going to right click and go group and we can group them into one object,
- 03:36 we can shrink them down slightly and rotate them around. And there we have some shapes on our slide, they are aligned and distributed
- 03:44 very evenly and it’s a very good process to go through so that the objects on your slide are aligned and distributed very easily and not like
- 03:53 our browns cows.
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