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Revolution in Writing From Word Processing to Paperless Publishing.

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Presentation on theme: "Revolution in Writing From Word Processing to Paperless Publishing."— Presentation transcript:

1 Revolution in Writing From Word Processing to Paperless Publishing

2 The Word Processing Process Word processing involves the following steps: Entering text Editing text Formatting & proofreading the document Saving the document on disk Printing the document

3 Entering Text As you enter text using a word processor, your text is displayed on the screen and stored in the computer’s RAM. Save your work periodically because RAM is not permanent memory.

4 Editing Text Write and refine a document easily by: navigating to different parts of a document inserting or deleting text at any point moving & copying text searching and replacing words or phrases

5 Formatting Text Formatting refers to how the words look on a page. WYSIWIG (“What you see is what you get”) What you see on the screen is a close approximation of what you will see on paper Types of formatting: Character Line & Paragraph Entire Document

6 Character Formatting Characters are measured by point size with one point equal to 1/72 inch. A 20 pts A 40 pts 80 pts 120 pts A A 200 pts A

7 All About Fonts A font is a size and style of typeface. Serif fonts have serifs or fine lines at the ends.  Sans-serif fonts have plainer, cleaner lines. Arial

8 Paragraph Formatting Formatting for paragraphs involve margin settings, line spacing, indents, tabs and justification.

9 Document Formatting You can impact the appearance of an entire document through the following: Style sheets Headers and footers Multiple columns Automatic editing features Table of Contents and Indexes Conversion to HTML for web publishing

10 The Wordsmith’s Toolbox Outliners and Idea Processors Synonym Finders Digital References Spelling Checkers Grammar and Style Checkers Form Letter Generators Collaborative Writing Tools

11 Outliners and Idea Processors arranging information into levels rearranging ideas and levels hiding and revealing levels of detail as needed Outliners are effective at performing the following functions:

12 Synonym Finders Computerized thesaurus can provide instantaneous feedback for synonyms and antonyms.

13 Digital References Dictionaries, quotation books, encyclopedias, atlases, almanacs and other references are now available in digital form. The biggest advantage of the electronic form is speed. The biggest drawback is that quick copying may tempt writers to plagiarize.

14 Spelling Checkers Spelling checkers compare words in your document with words in a disk- based dictionary. Words may be flagged; you make the decision to ignore or change the spelling.

15 Grammar and Style Checkers A grammar and style checker flags possible errors and makes suggestions for correcting. It spots the following: Spelling Errors of context Common grammatical errors Stylistic foibles

16 Form Letter Generators The Mail Merge feature in word processors generates personalized form letters and mailing labels.  Create a database with names  Create a form letter  Merge the database with the form letter to create a personalized letter

17 Collaborative Writing Tools Groupware -software designed to be used by a workgroup Provides for collaborative writing and editing Tracks changes and identifies by the originator’s name Compares document versions and highlights differences in documents

18 The Desktop Publishing Story The process of producing a book, magazine or other publications includes several steps:  Writing text  Editing text  Producing drawings, photographs, and other graphics to accompany text  Designing a basic format for the publication

19 What is Desktop Publishing? With modern desktop publishing technology, the production process can be accomplished with sophisticated tools that are affordable and easy to use. Typesetting text. Arranging text and graphics on images. Typesetting and printing pages. Binding pages into a finished publication.

20 Desktop Publishing Tools Scanners transform photographs and hand-drawn images into computer- readable documents. Page-layout software combine the various source documents into a coherent, visually appealing publication QuarkXpress PageMaker Adobe InDesign

21 What does the future hold? Despite predictions, written media isn’t going away. Yet… Electronic mail messages now out number post office deliveries of letters. CD-ROM encyclopedias briskly outsell their paper versions. The Internet provides for self-publishing to millions of users.

22 Tomorrow’s Word Tools Word processors are growing in sophistication and absorbing the features of page-layout software. Paperless electronic media will replace desktop publishing. Groupware for writing and editing Electronic dictation Intelligent Word Processors

23 Electronic Books and Digital Paper The electronic book, or ebook is a handheld device that can contain anything from today’s top news stories to lengthy novels. Digital paper, or epaper is a flexible, portable, paper-like material that can dynamically display black-and-white text and images on its surface.

24 Electronic Dictation & Intelligent Word Processors The bottleneck continues to be in the input side of desktop publishing systems. For the future: Speech-recognition software systems that can reliably recognize human speech. Intelligent word processors that anticipate a writer’s needs, acting as an electronic editor or co-author.

25 Chapter 6 Calculations, Visualization, and Simulation

26 The Spreadsheet Cell A1 Cell C12 The spreadsheet consists of:  Cells (the intersection of a row and column)  Addresses (column letter and row number, e.g., A1, C12)

27 Spreadsheet cells can contain values, labels, and formulas: The Spreadsheet  Values such as numbers and dates  Labels that explain what a value means, such as column and report headings

28 The Spreadsheet Formulas allow you to create instructions using mathematical expressions and commands + (plus) - (minus) *(multiplication) / (division) Sum Average

29 Spreadsheets offer many automatic features such as replication of data Type the first value in the series such as Qtr 1 or January or 500 and let the software replicate it to other cells. Spreadsheet Features

30 Formulas can be relative, so they refer to different cells when they are copied Or absolute, so the formula references never change when they are copied When the formula in column B is copied to column C, it changes relative to the new column.

31 Spreadsheet Features Automatic recalculation – Any time a change is entered into the spreadsheet, all data related to the change automatically updates.

32 Spreadsheet Features Functions (e.g., SUM, AVG, SQRT) are used to automate complex calculations Macros let you store keystrokes and commands so they can be played back automatically Templates offer ready-to-use worksheets with labels and formulas already entered

33 Spreadsheet Features Linking spreadsheets together When the value change in one spreadsheet, the data is automatically updated in all linked spreadsheets

34 Spreadsheet Features Database capabilities  Search for information  Sort the data by a specific criteria  Merge the data with a word processor  Generate reports

35 Spreadsheets allow you to change numbers and instantly see the effects of those changes. “What if I enter this value?” Equation solvers Some spreadsheets generate data needed to fit a given equation and target value. “What If?”

36 Charts allow you to turn numbers into visual data: Pie charts (show relative proportions to the whole) Line charts (show trends or relationships over time) Spreadsheet Graphics: From Digits to Drawings

37 Bar charts (use if data falls into a few categories)  Scatter charts (use to discover, rather than to display, a relationship between two variables)

38 Accounting and Financial Management software allows you to do electronically handle routine transactions such as: writing checks balancing accounts creating budgets Statistical Software: Beyond Spreadsheets

39 Mathematics Processing software turns abstract mathematical relationships into visual objects.

40 Statistical Software: Beyond Spreadsheets Statistical and data analysis software collects and analyzes data that tests the strength of data relationships.

41 Statistical Software: Beyond Spreadsheets Scientific visualization software uses shape, location in space, color, brightness, and motion to help us visualize data.

42 Computer modeling uses computers to create abstract models of objects, organisms, organizations, and processes. Calculated Risks: Computer Modeling and Simulation

43 Computer Modeling and Simulation Examples: computer games (chess boards, sports arenas, and mythological societies) computer models of organisms, objects, and organizations flight simulators and simulations of science lab activities managing a business, city, or nation

44 Computer Simulations are widely used for research in the physical, biological, and social sciences, and in engineering. Computer Simulation

45 Schools, businesses, and the military use simulations for training because: Safety: non-threatening environments Economy: less expensive than real life Projection: less threatening to systems Visualization: allows to see and understand Replication: allows repetition of projects Computer Modeling and Simulation

46 Computer Simulation: The Risks Risks: Simulation isn’t reality. Not all factors can be entered into the model or simulation.


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