Showing posts with label microsoft. Show all posts
Showing posts with label microsoft. Show all posts

Monday, September 29, 2014

Show a Watermark on the Document in Microsoft Office Word 2013

Microsoft Office is a popular application for the Windows operating system. Now Microsoft Office Word comes with the latest Microsoft Office 2013 which certainly comes with more features. Microsoft Office 2010 versions of Microsoft Office is a productivity suite for Windows operating systems, is the successor of Microsoft Office 2010 and included an extended file format support, user interface updates and support for a touch of the new features.

Microsoft Office system suitable for the 2013 IA-32 and x 64 Windows 7, Windows Server 2008 R2, Windows 8, Windows 8.1 etc.
The version of Microsoft Office 2013 comes included on Windows devices RT. Development started in the versions of Microsoft Office 2010 and ended on October 11, 2012 when Microsoft Office 2010 was released to manufacturing.

Microsoft released Office 2013 for general availability on January 29, 2013. This version contains new features such as support for the integration of the online service (including the SkyDrive, Outlook.com, Hotmail, Skype, Yammer and Flickr), improved support for the Office Open XML format (OOXML) and OpenDocument (ODF) and Portable Document Format (PDF) and support for multi-touch interface.



Microsoft Office 2010 comes in twelve different editions, including three editions to retail outlets, two editions to volume licensing channel, five editions is available through subscription-based Microsoft Office 365 web applications Edition program, known as Office Web Apps and Office of the RT Edition made for tablets and mobile devices.

The Watermark is useful as a marker of status of a particular document. It is useful to indicate that the document is specific or confirms the content of the document. For example, an important document that you can add to text Confidential. The Watermark can be shown in the form of text or images on a background are vague. This function also exists in Word 2007, but the trick is a bit different from Word 2013. Heres how:

1. Watermark text

Open the document to add the Watermark by clicking the File menu Open >. Click the tab Design > Watermark. Select one of the available templates, and will automatically perform the writings on the background.

2. Undo Watermarks

If you want to remove the Watermark, click the tab Design > Watermark. Click on the option Remove Watermark.

3. Homemade text Watermark

In addition to the form of the text is available, you can also make the text itself. To make it: Click Watermark > Custom Watermarks. Click Text Watermark. From the available columns, you can specify the font, size, color, and text that will be displayed. Click Apply and Close.

4. Watermark image

The trick is similar to the previous step. However, select Picture Watermark > Select Picture. Navigate to the location where the image is to be displayed. In order to display the image was disguised, tick on the option Washout.

Sunday, September 7, 2014

How to Import Data into Microsoft Access

Working with data in Microsoft Access databases can be preferable to working with spreadsheets for a number of reasons. One database file can hold several tables, which makes consolidating and organizing data easier. Databases are also great for calculating summaries and aggregating data more efficiently than a spreadsheet. Access is a relational database, which means that you can bring related data stored in different tables together to summarize and calculate data; a feat that a spreadsheet like Excel cannot perform.

Databases are a necessity when working with large datasets, as spreadsheets have a limit of 65,000 records. Finally, Microsoft Access databases are compatible with ArcGIS, as tables within Access databases can be directly accessed by ArcGIS and added to ArcMap. Tables can then be joined to boundary files based on a common field, and the data within the tables can be mapped. This is highly preferable to working with table in the dbf file format, which has very particular syntax rules that makes them difficult to work with. Accessdatabases can also serve as geodatabases for holding boundary files and data tables (for instructions on importing shapefiles into Access, see the Import Shapefiles to Access tutorial).

 Download How to Import Data into Microsoft Access