Thursday 25 April 2013

VSTO: Using C# to Create PowerPoint Presentations

VSTO:  Using C# to Create PowerPoint Presentations
Author: David Allen Pollock
Edition: 1
Binding: Paperback
ISBN: 0615742246



VSTO: Using C# to Create PowerPoint Presentations: A Practical Guide to Automating PowerPoint Presentation Creation Using Visual Studio Tools for Office


This text will walk you through all that you need to know to create PowerPoint presentations programmatically. Get VSTO: Using C# to Create PowerPoint Presentations computer books for free.
You can create them to be as fancy or as mundane as you wish them to be. We cover charts, tables, text, fonts, video, master slides, reporting, and more; everything that you need to create any presentation. Many companies are making the move to use PowerPoint as a form of visual reporting rather than only for developing presentations. Examples might include preparing a proposal, providing status reports, and high-content, detailed presentations. In these cases, the text on one slide might flow onto another, the fonts are generally smaller, there may be less white space, and the result much more resembles a structured report than Check VSTO: Using C# to Create PowerPoint Presentations our best computer books for 2013. All books are available in pdf format and downloadable from rapidshare, 4shared, and mediafire.

download

VSTO: Using C# to Create PowerPoint Presentations Download


You can create them to be as fancy or as mundane as you wish them to be. We cover charts, tables, text, fonts, video, master slides, reporting, and more; everything that you need to create any presentation. Many companies are making the move to use PowerPoint as a form of visual reporting rather than only for developing presentations. Examples might include preparing a proposal, providing status reports, and high-content, detailed presentations You can create them to be as fancy or as mundane as you wish them to be. We cover charts, tables, text, fonts, video, master slides, reporting, and more; everything that you need to create any presentation. Many companies are making the move to use PowerPoint as a form of visual reporting rather than only for developing presentations. Examples might include preparing a proposal, providing status reports, and high-content, detailed presentations. In these cases, the text on one slide might flow onto another, the fonts are generally smaller, there may be less white space, and the result much more resembles a structured report than

Related Computer Books


No comments:

Post a Comment