Tuesday, March 13th, 2007

Smaller spaces on PowerPoint Slides

Sometimes there is just too much space between the edge of the slide and the bullet character that PowerPoint uses.

However, luckily, there is a way to fix the problem and to make the space smaller. Start by displaying the ruler by choosign View, Ruler. Then select the text to alter and, on the ruler you’ll see the marker that controls the positioning of the bullet. Drag it with your mouse, if you need to do this in small amounts, hold Control as you do it.

Which is a bit strange really, because in Word, for example, holding Alt is how you get to fine tune spacing.. hmm! well, if nothing else, these crazy mixed up keystrokes keep some of us in business.

Helen Bradley

Friday, March 9th, 2007

PowerPoint preview and edit

I’m one of those people who love to do multiple things at one time. I can listen to a movie, work and have the washer and dryer chugging away in the background while I’m planning a weekend art project.

That’s why I love today’s tip. It lets you preview a PowerPoint presentation at the same time as you edit it.

Simply, choose Slide Show and while clicking View Show, hold the Control key. You’ll see your slide show on the screen in the top left corner and PowerPoint visible in the remaining area. You can work on the show and preview it (and your changes) the same time.. neat idea?

Helen Bradley

Sunday, March 4th, 2007

Use the PowerPoint menu to go back

By default, when you are viewing a PowerPoint presentation pressing the right mouse button shows the PowerPoint presentation menu.

If you’d prefer that, instead, it moved back one slide, then you can configure it to do this. Choose Tools, Options and click the View tab. Clear the Show menu on right mouse click checkbox and click Ok.

Now, the left mouse takes you forward and the right takes you back. If you need to see the menu at any time, pressing Shift + F10 will display it.

Helen Bradley

Wednesday, February 21st, 2007

Getting into PowerPoint Actions

When you create PowerPoint presentations that will be used or viewed by one person at a time, rather than by a group, you can customise movement using Action buttons.

Using an action button you can take a user to another place in the presentation or offer Yes and No as a choice to progress to the next slide and take the user to different places depending on their answer.

To add an action button, click on the slide to contain the action and chose Slide Show, Action Buttons and choose Action Button: Information and drag to place the button on the slide. When the Action Settings dialog appears, choose Hyperlink to and select the slide to link to. When a user clicks the button they will be taken to that slide.

If you want them to be able to return to where they came from you can add an Action: Return button to the slide you’re sending them to and they can click it to return to where they came from. This is handy for providing a slide with more information on the topic, for example.

You can use Actions without the buttons that PowerPoint provides. So, for example, you can use custom icons or AutoShapes and place them on the slide. Then right click the image and choose Action Settings from the menu. From here you can configure the same action options for the shape as you do for a PowerPoint Action button.

Action buttons can also be used to display an Excel worksheet or chart, a Word document, or even a web page, for example. When you’re creating an action button that should appear on all the slides in a presentation, you should create it on the Slide master by choosing View, Masters, Slide Master. Then the action button will be accessible to all slides in the presentation. If you need to block it from one slide, place an object over the top of it – action buttons under other objects are disabled and cannot be clicked.

Helen Bradley

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