I got this question from someone who works in a institution that has students with disabilities: How can I set up PowerPoints so that when the mouse is held down, the slides do not trip through whole presentation. I work with students with disabilities who sometimes find this difficult.
The answer is to change the mode in which PowerPoint plays the presentation. You can access the settings to make these changes through the Set Up Slide Show dialog box, accessed differently depending upon the version of PowerPoint you use:
PowerPoint 2007 and later users can select the Slide Show tab of the Ribbon, and click the Set Up Slide Show button.
PowerPoint 2003 and previous versions' users can choose the Slide Show | Set Up Show option.
Either way, you end up bringing up the Set Up Show dialog box that you can see in Figure 1, below.
Figure 1: Set Up Show
At the top right of this dialog, you'll need to select the Browsed by an individual (window) option -- and you can also decide whether you want the Show scrollbar option checked. Click OK when done, and save your presentation.
Here are some thoughts, caveats, and observations to be aware of:
Choosing this option means you don't get to play your PowerPoints in absolute full screen show mode -- there will be a title bar visible.
You can still use the keyboard to navigate to the next and previous slides. In fact, all keyboard commands will work.
The settings to enable this play mode, as explained above work only with the active presentation, and is saved within the presentation. You'll have to enable these settings for each presentation you want to not advance with mouse-clicks.
posted by Geetesh
at Tuesday, November 06, 2007 IST
Sometimes, it can be frustrating trying to do the simple things in PowerPoint such as duplicating an object right above the original. PowerPoint insists on placing the duplicated (or copy/pasted) object at an offset and there's no way to fine tune that setting. Maybe there's a registry tweak or something that I'm not aware of?
So why would anyone want to place a duplicated object right above the original? There are many scenarios that require such a placement:
You want to animate one object after the the other.
You want to rotate objects.
You want to make some changes to the duplicated object and then do a trigger animation.
You might want to do something else!
Meanwhile, here are some ideas and observations on how you can work around this limitation:
If you copy and paste a slide object on the same slide, it is placed at an offset. Sometimes, you can press the up arrow key twice, and then press the left arrow key twice to place the copied/duplicated object right above the slide, but even that does not work all the time. That setting only works if the Snap to Grid option is turned on.
If you copy a slide object (anything on a slide) and paste it on another empty slide, it is placed in the exact location as the original.
If some part of the original slide object exceeds the area off the edge of the slide, then the duplicated/pasted object will be pasted within the slide area as far as possible. Of course that only works if the object is not larger than the slide area.
The quickest way to place a duplicated object right above its original is to use a third-party add-in called Toolbox from Shyam Pillai. This includes a menu option called Toolbox | Shapes | Clone Shape(s).
Another way you can place pasted/duplicated objects right on top of the original is to use the Align tools. This works best if you have several duplicated objects. Select them all, and choose Align | Align Left, and Align | Align Top.
If you have found new ways to work around these issues, do add your comments to this post.
Winning at Trial with a Dynamic PowerPoint Presentation
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