Keynote User Guide for iPad
- Welcome
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- Intro to Keynote
- Intro to images, charts and other objects
- Create your first presentation
- Choose how to navigate your presentation
- Open a presentation
- Save and name a presentation
- Find a presentation
- Print a presentation
- Customise the toolbar
- Copy text and objects between apps
- Basic touchscreen gestures
- Use Apple Pencil with Keynote
- Create a presentation using VoiceOver
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- Send a presentation
- Intro to collaboration
- Invite others to collaborate
- Collaborate on a shared presentation
- Follow activity in a shared presentation
- Change a shared presentation’s settings
- Stop sharing a presentation
- Shared folders and collaboration
- Use Box to collaborate
- Create an animated GIF
- Post your presentation in a blog
- Copyright
Intro to images, charts and other objects in Keynote on iPad
An object is any item you place on a slide. Tables, charts, text boxes, shapes and photos are examples of objects. To add an object to a slide, do one of the following.
With your iPad in landscape orientation: Tap one of the object buttons in the middle of the toolbar at the top of your screen, then select an object from the menu.
With your iPad in portrait orientation: Tap in the toolbar, tap one of the object buttons at the top of the menu, then select an object.
You can change the look of an object by modifying individual attributes of it — like its fill colour, border, shadow and more — or you can quickly change the overall appearance of an object by applying a pre-designed object style to it. Object styles are combinations of attributes that are designed to match the theme you’re using.
To see controls for changing the look of objects, tap an object to select it, then tap . Each object has its own formatting options; when you select an image, for example, you see only controls for formatting images.
You can layer objects on a slide, resize them, or nest them so they appear inline with the text inside a text box or shape. You can also add a link to an object so that when you tap the object, a new slide, web page or email opens.