Although OpenOffice tries to be as much as Microsoft Office as possible one thing that they do not have a dedicated hierarchy diagram is utility like in Microsoft PowerPoint. However the flowchart functions in OpenOffice draw work nearly as well and you can create complicated organization charts, you change and reorganize can be. The finished diagram is easily integrated into OpenOffice write documents and impress presentations.
Instructions
1. Open Open Office by double-clicking its icon on your desktop. Click Open "Draw" from the menu.
2. Make sure the drawing line and filling tool bars by falling off in the view menu displayed will be, select "Toolbars" and make sure that these options are enabled.
3. Place the filling and desired line colors and line styles for the chart by using the drop-down menus in the toolbar line and filling. You can also select whether you want your boxes to drop shadow, by click the drop shadow icon in the toolbar.
4. In the pop-up menu, open flow diagrams in the Drawing toolbar at the bottom of the program window, and select the rectangle (the ToolTip displays "Flowchart: process.") Use the cursor to draw your first box above in the middle of the page.
5. On the text icon in the toolbar, click draw, and then click that you have drawn on the field. A blinking cursor appears in the box. Format drop down menu and select "Mark", set the font and font size you want for your label. Then enter the name for the top box in the hierarchy chart you want.
6. Select the rectangle tool from the Flowchart toolbar draw, and draw another field at the second level of the graph. Copy and paste this rectangle for as many fields as you need on your second level.
7. Click on the text tool in the tool bar drawing and use it to labels for all your second-level fields type.
8. Click on following in the Drawing toolbar and select the first connector with no arrows. If you select the Connector tool show all your boxes connection node in the middle of each side. Connecting lines between the fields by clicking the connection node of a box, and click a connection node from a box including drag recording.
9. Continue to lines connect the levels of your hierarchy diagram, after you add all the fields at a level with which name have levels of the fields.
Instructions
1. Open Open Office by double-clicking its icon on your desktop. Click Open "Draw" from the menu.
2. Make sure the drawing line and filling tool bars by falling off in the view menu displayed will be, select "Toolbars" and make sure that these options are enabled.
3. Place the filling and desired line colors and line styles for the chart by using the drop-down menus in the toolbar line and filling. You can also select whether you want your boxes to drop shadow, by click the drop shadow icon in the toolbar.
4. In the pop-up menu, open flow diagrams in the Drawing toolbar at the bottom of the program window, and select the rectangle (the ToolTip displays "Flowchart: process.") Use the cursor to draw your first box above in the middle of the page.
5. On the text icon in the toolbar, click draw, and then click that you have drawn on the field. A blinking cursor appears in the box. Format drop down menu and select "Mark", set the font and font size you want for your label. Then enter the name for the top box in the hierarchy chart you want.
6. Select the rectangle tool from the Flowchart toolbar draw, and draw another field at the second level of the graph. Copy and paste this rectangle for as many fields as you need on your second level.
7. Click on the text tool in the tool bar drawing and use it to labels for all your second-level fields type.
8. Click on following in the Drawing toolbar and select the first connector with no arrows. If you select the Connector tool show all your boxes connection node in the middle of each side. Connecting lines between the fields by clicking the connection node of a box, and click a connection node from a box including drag recording.
9. Continue to lines connect the levels of your hierarchy diagram, after you add all the fields at a level with which name have levels of the fields.
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