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Microsoft Visio 2010 : Organizing and Annotating Diagrams - Markup & Review

11/26/2012 4:17:28 PM
You’ve seen how callouts and ScreenTips can be used to annotate your diagrams and how layers can be used to turn details on and off.

If you have a living document for which several people need to give input, the markup and review features will be of interest, particularly comments, markup, and ink. Visio’s reviewing capabilities aren’t as powerful or fluid as Word’s, but you might still find them useful.

Comments

Comments allow multiple users to critique a document. They are similar to ScreenTips but are more noticeable, and they aren’t attached to shapes.

Comments float on the page as little yellow boxes with the initials of the commenter and an ID number. To read one, just click it and it expands to reveal its contents.

Figure 1 shows a diagram with comments from two different users. The comment from “BWG” is collapsed, and the comment from “EEE” is expanded so you can read the message, along with the commenter’s full name and the date it was made.

Figure 1. Expanded and collapsed reviewing comments.



Adding Comments to Your Diagram
1.
On the Review tab, click New Comment in the Comments group. A little yellow box with your initials appears on the page, with an expanded area for adding text.

2.
Enter a message in the box. As soon as you click somewhere else on the page, the comment collapses to show just the initials.

3.
You can freely drag the comment box around the page and position it wherever you want.

4.
If you hover your mouse cursor over the comment box, the full name of the commenter appears, along with the date the comment was last updated.

Note: The name and initials of a user are set in the File, Options, General tab, in the Personalize Your Copy of Microsoft Office area. There you see text fields for User Name and Initials.

5.
If you click a comment box, it expands and the entire comment appears.

6.
Notice also that in the Markup group on the Review tab, the Show Markup button is now pressed, and the Reviewing pane is visible on the right.

7.
Toggle the Show Markup button on and off. Notice that your comments appear and disappear.

8.
Toggle the Reviewing Pane button on and off. The Reviewing pane shows and hides itself, but your comments remain as long as Show Markup is pressed.

9.
With Show Markup pressed, go to File, Print, Print Preview. Notice that the comments are not visible. Review comments do not print.

Be aware that comments are part of Visio’s Review features and are visible only when the Show Markup button is pressed. This is a little confusing because comments are actually different from markup, as you see in the next section.

Markup

In Visio, markup is slightly different from the comments you just explored, even though they are related by the Show Markup button and the Review tab.

Markup consists of graphics that a user adds to a page. When you click the Track Markup button (just above the Reviewing Pane button), Visio creates a special markup overlay tab for the current user on top of the page. Any edits to the drawing made while Track Markup is pressed are put on this tab and given a color that corresponds to the user. Markup is like a hybrid of pages and layers; each reviewer gets his or her own markup overlay tab, associated with a particular page and a particular reviewer.

Figure 2 shows a familiar diagram that has been commented on and marked up by two users.

Figure 2. A diagram that has comments and markup from two users. Note the two markup tabs in the upper-right corner of the page.

There’s a lot going on in Figure 2, so let’s go over the important bits, one by one:

  • In the Reviewing pane, there is a history list under “Markup Page-1.” This shows both comments and markup added, and which user made the modification. You can see that EEE and BWG have both added comments and shapes to the drawing.

  • Each user has an associated color. When a user creates a shape on the page, it is shown in this color. 

  • There are two tabs in the upper right corner of the drawing page, one for each user. These tabs are colored to match the red and blue of EEE and BWG, respectively.

  • Along the same edge, but at the bottom, you see the Original tab. This is, of course, where the nonmarkup drawing bits can be accessed. Clicking the Page-1 tab also returns you to the regular drawing.

  • Tab BWG has just been clicked. When this happens, the markup shapes from BWG are selected in the drawing page. You can see that the Reduction and Recycling boxes are selected. These boxes are also colored blue, because they were created by user BWG.

  • When the BWG tab is active, only the shapes created by BWG can be selected and edited. The drawing’s shapes can’t be touched, and neither can EEE’s markup shapes.

  • Notice the shape under “Combustion Power” that says “Garbage incineration?” This shape is red and was added by user EEE. To edit this shape, you would need to click the EEE tab in the upper-right corner.

  • If you turn off Show Markup, the markup overlay tabs disappear, along with the corresponding markup shapes. Alternatively, you can turn off markup from select users by checking and unchecking users in the list beneath Show Markup Overlays.

  • Any visible markup will print, although comments do not print, as we discussed earlier.

The markup features for Visio are great for commenting on living diagrams that are in continuous flux. The colorization and separate overlay tabs for each user are useful and keep things tidy. I found these features to be a bit complicated at first, but if you just experiment for a few minutes, they’ll start to make more sense.

What is missing from Visio markup, however, is the ability to delete shapes and Accept Changes, as you can in Microsoft Word.

If you’ve used Word’s reviewing features, you are probably used to being able to accept or reject a change. Graphics on the markup overlay tabs are stuck in their own parallel universe, separated from the actual drawing. This has frustrated Visio users for quite some time.

The workaround is to cut shapes from an overlay tab, click the Original tab, and then paste them. Not difficult, but not as smooth as right-clicking and choosing Accept or Reject. As for deleting shapes, you can simply add a rectangle or comment that says “delete this” and hope that the document’s owner takes your advice.

Ink

If you use a tablet PC or like to scribble with your mouse, you’ll like Ink. Inking allows you to draw and write freehand on Visio pages. You can leave your inking as Ink entities, convert it to Visio shapes, or let Visio try to recognize your handwriting and convert it to text.

You access Ink from the Markup group of the Review tab, but your inking does not have to be part of a markup overlay; it can be used in normal drawings independent of markup and review.

When you click the Ink button, you are taken to the Ink Tools contextual tab. There you can choose to scribble with the Ballpoint Pen or Highlighter. You can change the color and weight of your ink creations and erase strokes using the Stroke Eraser. Each ink stroke that you add is combined with the previous ones into a single shape. You can click the Close Ink Shape to finish one inking entity and begin a new one.

Figure 3 shows two ink entities: one is text created with the Ballpoint Pen tool, and the other is a Highlighter streak over the “Energy Sources” title. To make sure the highlighter streak was not combined with the handwritten text, I used the Close Ink Shape in between.

Figure 3. Ballpoint pen and Highlighter entities created with Ink.

You can also see that I’ve right-clicked the chicken scrawl and am ready to click Convert Ink to Text. Believe it or not, this actually worked! A moment later, a legible block of text in 12-point Calibri appeared in its place. You can also convert your ink items to Visio shapes that can be edited with the Line, Pencil or Freeform tools.

Other -----------------
- Microsoft Visio 2010 : Organizing and Annotating Diagrams - Layers
- Microsoft PowerPoint 2010 : Animating Slide Content (part 5) - Animating Parts of a Chart, Animation Tips
- Microsoft PowerPoint 2010 : Animating Slide Content (part 4) - Working with Motion Paths
- Microsoft PowerPoint 2010 : Animating Slide Content (part 3) - Setting Animation Event Triggers, Associating Sounds with Animations, Making an Object Appear Differently after Animation
- Microsoft PowerPoint 2010 : Animating Slide Content (part 2) - Special Options for Text Animation
- Microsoft PowerPoint 2010 : Animating Slide Content (part 1) - Choosing an Animation Effect
- Microsoft PowerPoint 2010 : Assigning Transitions to Slides
- Microsoft Excel 2010 : Using Formulas - Entering a Formula
- Microsoft Excel 2010 : Using Formulas - The Importance of Laying Data Out Properly, Formulas Versus Values
- Microsoft Word 2010 : Viewing a Document’s Statistics, Evaluating a Document’s Readability
 
 
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