Home     PowerPoint     Photoshop     Photos     Other     Studio     Info

Bookmark and Share  




Product Showcase




 



PowerPoint Notes

Info-things on PowerPoint usage including tips, techniques and tutorials.


Thursday, October 23, 2008
posted by Geetesh at Thursday, October 23, 2008 IST

A friend sent me this question: I want to make one slide .PPS file. On click, or on pressing any key the .PPS file should exit or close. Can this be done?

Yes, it can -- it's easier to do this on click rather than by pressing any key. Follow these steps:

  1. With your one slide presentation ready, open it in PowerPoint.

  2. PowerPoint 2007 users can then select the rectangle shape from the Home tab | Drawing | Shapes gallery. Users of earlier versions will find the rectangle shape option in the Drawing toolbar located below the PowerPoint interface.

  3. Draw a rectangle that covers the entire slide. You'll have to drag the corners of the rectangle to resize.

  4. With the rectangle selected, PowerPoint 2007 users can choose the Insert tab | Links | Action to bring up the Action Settings dialog box that you see in Figure 1. Users of earlier PowerPoint versions can access the same dialog box by right-clicking the rectangle, and choosing Action Settings from the resultant menu.

    Action Settings in PowerPoint
    Figure 1: Action Settings

  5. Click the Hyperlink to radio button, and from the text dropdown box, choose the End Show option (see Figure 1 above) . Click OK to exit the dialog box.

  6. PowerPoint 2007 users can now select the rectangle, so that the Drawing Tools Format tab is visible in the Ribbon -- activate this tab, and then select the Shape Fill option to reveal a flyout menu. Choose the More Fill Colors option to bring up the Colors dialog box -- change the Transparency to 99%, and click OK. With the rectangle still selected, choose the Drawing Tools Format tab | Shape Styles | Shape Outline | No Outline option.

    Users of previous PowerPoint versions can double click the rectangle to summon the Format AutoShape dialog box. In this multi-tabbed dialog box, select the Colors and Lines tab, then under the Color dropdown list, drag the Transparency slider to 99%. In the Line Color dropdown list, choose the No Line option. Click OK to get back to the slide.

  7. Now when you play this presentation, just click anywhere to end the show!

Labels: , ,

1 comments

Links to this post



Comments:


Thanks Geetesh. This tip helped me in my presentation.
  Edit Comment

Post a Comment

Links to this post:

Create a Link

[an error occurred while processing this directive]

Archives:

July 2004  |  August 2004  |  September 2004  |  May 2005  |  June 2005  |  July 2005  |  November 2005  |  February 2006  |  April 2006  |  June 2006  |  September 2006  |  October 2006  |  February 2007  |  May 2007  |  August 2007  |  November 2007  |  February 2008  |  October 2008  |  June 2009  |  

Featured Story

Winning at Trial with a Dynamic PowerPoint Presentation

Robert Lane A lot is at stake -- power, money, reputation, future plans, justice. You need to win this case. Your presentation materials surely will play an important role in helping the judge and jury experience the sights, sounds, and details of the case ... or not. The choice is up to you, says one tech-savvy attorney.

Bruce A. Olson The choice is up to you, says one tech-savvy attorney. It all depends upon whether you are willing to push PowerPoint beyond its normal boundaries to maximize its interactive and persuasive potential. This article by Robert Lane and Bruce A. Olson provides a better idea of using PowerPoint in court.

Read this now...

 

    
Featured Book

PowerPoint 2007 Complete Makeover Kit

PowerPoint 2007 Complete Makeover Kit
PowerPoint 2007 Complete Makeover Kit is out! Check the book on Amazon.com...

And here are some free excerpts...



  Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape


  ©2000-2009, Geetesh Bajaj. All rights reserved.

    since November 02, 2000