Changing a Slide’s Layout

Although earlier versions of PowerPoint had many different layouts, they were all mostly the same, but with different types of content placeholders. In PowerPoint 2007, there are fewer layouts, but the placeholders on them are much more accommodating to different types of content. For example, the default layout, called Title and Content, has placeholders for a slide title plus a single type of content—text, a table, a chart, a picture, a piece of clip art, a SmartArt diagram, or a movie. That’s a big improvement because now you can choose based on the layout you want, and not the type of content you might decide to put into it.

When you change the layout, you change the type and/or positioning of the placeholders on it. If the previous placeholders had content in them, that content shifts to a new location on the slide to reflect the different positioning for that placeholder type. If the new layout does not contain a placeholder appropriate for that content, the content remains on the slide, but becomes orphaned. That means it is a free-floating object, outside of the layout. You need to manually position an orphaned object if it’s not in the right spot. However, if you later apply a different layout that does contain a placeholder for the orphaned object, it snaps back into that placeholder.

Are Layouts Stored in Themes?

Yes and no. Yes, custom layouts are stored with theme files, but they are not always immediately available when you apply that theme ...

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