slide build transitions

G

Gregg

It appears that in PPT 2002 you can no longer transition
one line at a time on individual slides.....has anyone
else found that to be true? Is there a work around? Am
I missing something?

gregg
 
K

Kathryn Jacobs

Gregg,
The options you are looking for are a little hidden in XP. Right click on
the animation (in the animation pane) and select effect options. Look at the
tabs. I think what you are looking for is on the second (?maybe third) tab.

--
Kathryn Jacobs, Microsoft PPT MVP
If this helped you, please take the time to rate the value of this post:
http://rate.affero.net/jacobskl/
Get PowerPoint answers at http://www.powerpointanswers.com
Cook anything outdoors with http://www.outdoorcook.com
Kathy is a trainer, writer, Girl Scout, and whatever else there is time for
I believe life is meant to be lived. But:
if we live without making a difference, it makes no difference that we lived
 
E

Echo S

Gregg said:
It appears that in PPT 2002 you can no longer transition
one line at a time on individual slides.....has anyone
else found that to be true? Is there a work around? Am
I missing something?

In addition to Kathy's method using the Effect Options, you can also do
the following:

1. Right-click the text placeholder and choose custom animation.

2. On the custom animation task pane, click the small arrow that's under
the animation. It will say "click to expand contents" if you hover your
mouse over it.

3. This should expand your bulleted list. Subbullets will have a "with
previous" setting by default. Select any of the individual text lines in
the task pane and change their start setting at the top of the task pane
to "after previous" or "on mouse click," whichever you prefer.

Oh, and to get to the Effect Options Kathy mentioned, you have to
right-click the textbox on the slide, select Custom Animation, then
right-click the animation on the task pane and choose Effect Options
from there. Changing those settings will change the behavior of the
individual bulleted lines you see in step 3.
 
G

Gregg

-----Original Message-----
Gregg,
The options you are looking for are a little hidden in XP. Right click on
the animation (in the animation pane) and select effect options. Look at the
tabs. I think what you are looking for is on the second (?maybe third) tab.

--
Kathryn Jacobs, Microsoft PPT MVP
If this helped you, please take the time to rate the value of this post:
http://rate.affero.net/jacobskl/
Get PowerPoint answers at http://www.powerpointanswers.com
Cook anything outdoors with http://www.outdoorcook.com
Kathy is a trainer, writer, Girl Scout, and whatever else there is time for
I believe life is meant to be lived. But:
if we live without making a difference, it makes no difference that we lived




.
Kathryn, thank you. It's close, but I was looking for a
wipe right/left, etc. one by one......I didn't see that
one anywhere.

Gregg
 
G

Gregg

-----Original Message-----
Gregg said:
It appears that in PPT 2002 you can no longer transition
one line at a time on individual slides.....has anyone
else found that to be true? Is there a work around? Am
I missing something?

In addition to Kathy's method using the Effect Options, you can also do
the following:

1. Right-click the text placeholder and choose custom animation.

2. On the custom animation task pane, click the small arrow that's under
the animation. It will say "click to expand contents" if you hover your
mouse over it.

3. This should expand your bulleted list. Subbullets will have a "with
previous" setting by default. Select any of the individual text lines in
the task pane and change their start setting at the top of the task pane
to "after previous" or "on mouse click," whichever you prefer.

Oh, and to get to the Effect Options Kathy mentioned, you have to
right-click the textbox on the slide, select Custom Animation, then
right-click the animation on the task pane and choose Effect Options
from there. Changing those settings will change the behavior of the
individual bulleted lines you see in step 3.

--
Echo [MS PPT MVP]
http://www.echosvoice.com
.
Echo, thanks for the advice....works well. I would have
never found that.

Gregg
 

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