Add option to expand pages to the side, in the middle or to the top, as where space is needed.
When importing pages, you often don't have the writing space you need. Adding an option to cut a page in 2 and expand the writing space that way, or expand a page with paper to the side would be great to solve this problem
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tsz wang Ko commented
Yes that functionality would be a dream for a uni student like me
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vaneesh dass commented
When I import the slides I can't write on top of that. Space is very crammed.
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Marius W commented
Had the same idea. I'm mostly working with prewritten scripts. Most times there isn't enough space on the sides or in between.
1. If the template is in the size of A4 for example it would be great if I could make it A3, by adding an A4 to one of the sides.
I submitted this idea a while ago and the suggestion was to change the template. By just changing the template to A3 it didn't take the current slice, but most times the very first of the document. The problem was that I couldn't revoke it. Also it didn't create the space where I wanted it to be.2. Imagine a tool in the toolbar with which you can mark at a certain line in the document (mostly horizontally, but maybe even vertically?) that cuts of the following lower section of the page and adds it on top of a blank following page. The section on the previous edited page is blank.
Please comment
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Randell Duggins commented
The only feature I can suggest as an improvement is the one thing OneNote kind of does right, which is the ability to annotate beyond the margins of imported PDF documents. It is great to be able to annotate over a document, but it is better to be able to take copious notes beyond the margins. Example: Most professors provide PDF or PowerPoint lecture notes, but they are typically loaded with information. How angering to hear important commentary in class only to look down and realize that you need to write smaller than the human eye can see to fit information between lines of text, in the narrowest of margins, or between illustrations. The only mechanism I have deduced to combat this is to open a PDF version in Preview, drag one slide at a time into a folder, and import those images on at a time onto a slide larger PowerPoint slide to create blank space, and export the document again as a combined PDF. Talk about a waste of time! If only there was a way to import PDFs onto a larger canvas. Not a ridiculously infinite space like OneNote, but templates of reasonable dimensions. With that, I would be thoroughly satisfied.