If the document is read only and you are attempting to plagiarize it, you don't change it.
If for some reason the document is legitimately yours and is still read only, you coply the whole document by highlighting it (press ctrl and "A"), copy it (ctrl + "C") and paste it (ctrl + P) into a new document. Then highlight the title and just begin typing the new title.
Document changes that include revised text because of a change
<TITLE> </TITLE>, Text formatting tags
It is treated the same way as what the text between title tags is in a HTML document. It will appear in the title bar. It is not the actual name of the file.
Click on Titles and Credits. Select where to place the title. Then select: Change Animation or Text Color and Font to make further changes to the text/title.
When given the option to save the document you can change the document title by overwriting the default name given it. Or you can change the document title after saving by right clicking on the document icon and selecting the "Rename" option.
title
The header, or head section, probably. Other than that, it's just "the first line" as far as I know.
Resave the document into your my documents folder, and change the colour (don't forget to save it again afterwards!)
Document is a text. You can save text in your document.
I don't believe you are missing the Title Animation option. Perhaps you are looking for the feature in the wrong place?To add Title/Credits/Text (including change animation option):> Click Tools, Titles and Credits> Select where you want the Title/text to appear> Enter the title/text in the space provided> Change the animation/text font and/or color> Click Add Title
The subtitle of a document is the second title. The subtitle follows the main title, and is generally used to give further information on the text, or the given title. For example, the title "Cancer and the Eyes" may be followed by the subtitle "How the Eyes Signal Cancer in the Body."
title bar It is called Insertion point