From: Luis on 27 Apr 2010 12:53 This might be a really goofy question, and I just want to see if this is the "right" practice or not. I'm noticing a lot of PowerPoint 07 presentations that have graph charts (bar graphs) with the chart area going OUTSIDE of the slide. However, the actual data (bar graphs) is still within the slide. Is this okay? I don't know if this is a common practice, and if it is, that's cool. I was just curious if that's how it is supposed to be or if the chart areas need to be formatted to fit WITHIN the slide. Thank you, Luis
From: Rick Altman on 27 Apr 2010 16:52 This is reminiscent of what I jokingly tell the girls on the softball team that I coach: Throw the ball first, then declare what your target was afterward. "Luis" <Luis(a)discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:9A53890E-A154-443E-BDEA-BEC6D9D50760(a)microsoft.com... > This might be a really goofy question, and I just want to see if this is > the > "right" practice or not. > > I'm noticing a lot of PowerPoint 07 presentations that have graph charts > (bar graphs) with the chart area going OUTSIDE of the slide. However, the > actual data (bar graphs) is still within the slide. > > Is this okay? > > I don't know if this is a common practice, and if it is, that's cool. I > was > just curious if that's how it is supposed to be or if the chart areas need > to > be formatted to fit WITHIN the slide. > > Thank you, > > Luis
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