![]() Tap the right arrow next to the character style name, then do one of the following:Īpply the changes to the style and keep the same name: Tap Update next to the style name. Use the text controls to change the text appearance.Īn asterisk appears next to the character style name to show that the text has been modified from its original formatting. The character style being used appears below Text Color in the controls. Then select that text and continue with the steps below. ![]() Note: If you want to modify a character style that isn’t being used yet in your presentation, first select some text and apply the style to it (see the task above). If you don’t like the changes you made, you can close the formatting controls, then tap multiple times to step back through your changes and reverse them. The Update button is removed and the style is reverted to its original format. Revert changes to a paragraph style: Tap the style name (but not the Update button), then tap the style name in the Paragraph Style menu (but not the Update button). Any text that uses this paragraph style is updated with the changes. Any text that uses the original style isn’t changed.Īpply the changes to the style and keep the same name: Tap Update next to the style name. The new style is selected and appears with a temporary name (you can type a new name for it). Tap and change the text appearance (font, font size, color, and so on) however you want.Īn asterisk and an Update button appear next to the paragraph style name to indicate that the style has been modified.Ĭreate a new paragraph style: Tap the style name (but not the Update button), tap Edit at the top right of the controls, then tap + at the top left of the controls. Select the text where you want to create a new style, or tap in text that uses the style you want to change. ![]() To add a new style, you first modify the text of a paragraph in your presentation to look the way you want, then create the new style based on that text. Restore an earlier version of a presentation.Export to PowerPoint or another file format.Change a shared presentation’s settings. ![]() See the latest activity in a shared presentation.Play a slideshow with multiple presenters.Make a presentation advance automatically.Change the look of chart text and labels.Add a legend, gridlines, and other markings.Change a chart from one type to another.Select tables, cells, rows, and columns.Add borders and rules (lines) to separate text.Format Chinese, Japanese, or Korean text.Make characters superscript or subscript.Format a presentation for another language.Select text and place the insertion point.Add linked objects to make your presentation interactive.Fill shapes and text boxes with color or an image.Place objects inside a text box or shape.Choose how to navigate your presentation.Intro to images, charts, and other objects.If you make improvements, please let me know or at my GitHub page. Send Keynote Text To Markdown File, by Yours Truly.Send Keynote Presenter Notes To Evernote, by Ben Waldie, or.Until then check out the following gists: Or after working on a Keynote presentation, a presenter could export the text outline and use it to create a handout or memo accompanying the presentation. Now if Apple would only add the ability to import and export text outlines into and out of Keynote, it would allow a presenter to draft an outline in a text file or in Pages, then import it into Keynote and build a presentation around it. I was so happy to find Ben’s script that I tinkered with it to make a gist of my own that exports Keynote text to a Desktop Markdown file as follows: A breakdown of how Ben’s script works is at: The Unofficial Apple Weblog: Send Keynote presenter notes to Evernote with AppleScript. Using Applescript, Ben’s gist at Github exports text from Keynote 6.2, formats it in HTML, and stores it in an Evernote file. I searched for an hour before I discovered a gist written by Ben Waldie, aka the Apple Script Guru on Twitter, and keeper of the Automated Workflows Site. Also, no way to extract the text from Presenter Notes. Apple’s Keynote exports to PowerPoint, PDF, HTML complete, images, and even a zip file, but offers no option to export Keynote slides to plain text or outline format.
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