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Microsoft Visio Tutorial

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Microsoft Visio is a diagramming tool that allows you to create diagrams ranging from simple to complex , which aid in data visualization and process modelling.

Visio also helps to create detailed org charts, floor plans, pivot diagrams, etc. This tutorial will help you understand the basics of the program and how you can use it to create informative diagrams for home or enterprise use. Microsoft Visio is an enterprise class software that is used by professionals to create diagrams of varying complexities — from networking diagrams to floor plans, and even org charts and timelines.

However, Visio is also gaining traction among home users for planning their home layouts or simple layout plans. This tutorial caters to both enterprise and home users with varying levels of experience, who plan to integrate Visio into their workflow.

You should be comfortable navigating your way around the Windows OS Windows 7 or later. Visio is not available for the Mac. Visio Pro can be included as part of the Office suite or purchased standalone in Standard and Professional versions.

A Microsoft account is required to utilize some of the online features of Visio. Visio Online allows you to view, share, and collaborate with Visio diagrams created in Visio or Teach with us.

 
 

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Visio lets you transform complicated text and tables that are hard to understand into visual diagrams that communicate information at a glance. There are many kinds of Visio diagrams, including organization charts, network diagrams, workflows, and home or office plans. Getting started with Visio can be summarized into three basic steps: using a template, arranging and connecting shapes, and modifying shapes with text.

Note: If you have Visio Plan 2, you have access to both the installed app and the web version of Visio. With Visio Plan 1, you get just the web version of Visio. Not sure which license you have? You can check what version you have.

Note: See Install Visio if you haven’t installed the Visio app yet. Tutorial: 3 basic steps to create a Visio diagram:. Choose and open a template. Arrange and connect shapes. Add text to shapes and connectors. Templates include stencils, shapes, and grid measurements to help you get started quickly and easily when making your diagram. Templates come with stencils that are full of the shapes needed to create a particular kind of drawing. The Home Plan template, for example, opens with stencils full of shapes such as walls, furniture, appliances, cabinets, and so on.

The Organization Chart template includes distinct shapes for executives, managers, assistants, positions, consultants, vacancies, and more. Some drawings require a special scale. For example, the Site Plan template opens with an engineering scale, where 1 inch represents 10 feet. Templates come ready with appropriate settings for the drawing type. Some templates have unique features that you can find on special tabs in the ribbon.

For example, when you open the Office Layout template, a Plan tab appears. You can use the Plan tab to configure display options that are specific to office layout diagrams. In some cases when you open a Visio template, a wizard helps you get started.

For example, the Space Plan template opens with a wizard that helps you set up your space and room information. Start the Visio app or open Visio on the web. Note: Haven’t installed Visio yet?

If you have Visio Plan 2, you can download and install the Visio desktop app. Select the template you want, or select Basic Diagram to start from scratch. You can also browse for more templates by clicking Categories , and you can enter terms to search for templates.

If you’re using the desktop link, you may have to specify a specific type of that template and then select Create. To create your diagram, you drag shapes from the stencil in the Shapes window to the canvas and connect them.

There are several ways to connect shapes, but the simplest way is with AutoConnect arrows. Note: AutoConnect is available by default when your drawing is based on a template for a type that typically requires connections, like a flowchart.

If do not see the AutoConnect arrows when you hover the mouse pointer over a shape, AutoConnect is not active. Visio shapes are ready-made objects that you drag onto your drawing page — they are the building blocks of your diagram. When you drag a shape from the Shapes window onto your drawing page, the original shape remains on the stencil. That original is called a master shape. The shape that you put on your drawing is a copy — also called an instance — of that master. You can drag as many instances of the same shape onto your drawing as you want.

Instead of static pictures, you can create data-connected Visio diagrams that display data, are easy to refresh, and dramatically increase your productivity. You can use the wide variety of diagram templates and stencils in Visio to understand, act on, and share information about organizational systems, resources, and processes throughout your enterprise.

The round handle located above a selected shape is called a rotation handle. Drag it right or left to rotate the shape. The connection arrows help you easily connect shapes to one another, as you saw in the previous section. You can use the square selection handles to change the height and width of your shape.

Click and drag a selection handle on the corner of a shape to enlarge the shape without changing its proportions, or click and drag a selection handle on the side of a shape to make the shape taller or wider. You can add data to each shape by typing it in the Shape Data window — on the View tab, in the Show group, click Task Panes , and then click Shape Data.

With Visio Professional Edition, you can also import data from an external data source. Data is not displayed in the drawing by default. If you want to display the data for lots of shapes at once, you can use a feature called data graphics, also on the Data tab. The following illustration shows the data for two trees at once. Many Visio shapes have special behavior that you can find by stretching, right-clicking, or moving the yellow control handle on the shape.

For example, you can stretch a People shape to show more people, or stretch the Growing flower shape to indicate growth. Tip: A great way to find out what a shape can do is to right-click it to see if there are any special commands on its shortcut menu. The shapes automatically connect to show the hierarchy. Hold your mouse over one of the arrows and a mini toolbar appears with the top four shapes in the Quick Shapes area.

Select the shape you want and it’ll automatically connect to the arrow you selected. You can also drag all your shapes onto the canvas. Then hold the mouse over a shape until the arrows appear. Then grab an arrow and drag it to a shape you want to connect to. If you’re using the Visio desktop app, you can also drag a new shape directly from the Shapes window to an existing shape’s arrows and connect them automatically. Now it’s time to add details to your diagram by adding text.

For more details about working with text, see Add, edit, move, or rotate text on shapes and Add text to a page. Add text to a connector the same way. Click and drag it up, down, or beside the connector.

To see other available themes, click More. Your diagram gets a new background, and, a new background page called VBackground This page you can see in the page tabs along the bottom of the canvas. To edit other text in the border, first select the entire border, and then click the text you want to change and start typing. You may have to click more than once to get the text selected. Click Page-1 in the lower-right corner of the page to return to the drawing. Open Visio on the web.

Note: If you have Visio Plan 2, you can also download and install the Visio desktop app. Select Create under the template you want, or select Create under Basic Diagram to start from scratch. To create your diagram, you drag shapes from the stencil in the Shapes pane to the canvas and connect them.

There are several ways to connect shapes, but the simplest way is by auto-connecting them. Note: See Add and connect shapes in Visio for the web or Change the size, rotation, and order of a shape in Visio for the web to learn more about using shapes. For more details about working with text, see Add and format text in Visio for the web. Drag a shape from the Shapes window and drop it on the page.

Leave the mouse pointer over the shape until four arrows appear around the sides. These are AutoConnect arrows, which give you several ways to automatically connect shapes. Hold the mouse pointer over one of the arrows and a mini toolbar appears, holding the top four shapes in the Quick Shapes area. Move the pointer over each to see a preview of that shape on your diagram. Click the one that you want, and that shape appears with a connector between it and your first shape.

Drag a shape from the Shapes window and hold it over a shape on the page until the arrows appear, then drop the shape on top of one of the arrows. Hold the pointer over a shape until the arrows appear, then grab an arrow, drag it to a shape you want to connect to, and drop it in the middle of the second shape.

Note: Some templates have other handy ways to add and connect shapes. Click a shape once and start typing. Select a shape that has text. Click Home and use tools in the Font and Paragraph groups to format the text. On the Design tab, in the Themes group, move the pointer slowly over the different themes. Each theme adds different colors and effects to the diagram.

Click the one you want to apply. Click one of the background designs. Now look down at the bottom of Visio, just under the drawing page. There are two tabs: Page-1 and VBackground Page-1 is the page with the shapes on it, and VBackground-1 is a background page you just added.

Click VBackground-1 to see just the background page, and then click Page-1 to go back to the diagram. Click one of the options to add it to the diagram.

 

Online Course: Microsoft Visio .Beginner tutorial for Visio

 
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