"Kim A." <Kim A.@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:4E06DF7E-ACFF-46AC...@microsoft.com...
Lemme run this one past you:
Suppose the slide background's a flat color. White, for example, since this is
for printouts.
Suppose you then select the text you want to hide and assign it a color from
the color scheme, not one of the "whim o' the user" colors. Say Accent1,
arbitrarily.
Other text is assigned the Text and Lines scheme color (which it generally gets
by default).
To get black text with hidden bits, you edit the scheme to make Accent1 white
(same as background, whoops, there it went, gone!) and print. Might need a few
adjustments to b/w settings for b/w printouts (grayscale rather than automatic
seems to work), but it should work.
For editing convenience, you'd edit Accent1 to be e.g. red, so you can see
which text will be hidden later.
For printing/viewing with hidden text UN hidden, edit Accent1 to be black or
whatever color's been assigned Text and Lines.
Takes five times as long to describe as it'd take to do. <g>
-----------------------------------------
Steve Rindsberg, PPT MVP
PPT FAQ: www.pptfaq.com
PPTools: www.pptools.com
================================================
Create your textbox and move it off the slide area, it will show when seen
on screen, but not in be seen during a slideshow or when printed.
You can add text to a text box on screen and set it to trigger itself in an
entrance animation, which will hide it during the show, but display it in
print and edit modes.
Add your text to the notes page, it will not print with the slide but will
with the notes and can be seen in some views
Add your text to a hyperlink and it will show when moused over during
slideshow, but not print or be seen on the screen in edit view
Add your text to an object tag and it will not show anywhere unless you go
looking for it in code
Add your text to a comment and the user can select if it should print
In PowerPoint there are 4 views to consider (as opposed to 2 in Excel and
Word): Edit (screen), Show, Notes, and print. So the question becomes, in
what views do you not want it to be displayed, and in which do you want to
see it?
--
Bill Dilworth
A proud member of the Microsoft PPT MVP Team
Users helping fellow users.
http://billdilworth.mvps.org
-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_
yahoo2@ Please read the PowerPoint FAQ pages.
yahoo. They answer most of our questions.
com www.pptfaq.com
.
"Kim A." <Kim A.@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:4E06DF7E-ACFF-46AC...@microsoft.com...
--
Echo [MS PPT MVP]
http://www.echosvoice.com
"Steve Rindsberg" <ab...@localhost.com> wrote in message
news:VA.00001ff...@localhost.com...
True. But if Kim really needs to select and hide certain words within a text
box .... ;-)
>
> Create your textbox and move it off the slide area, it will show when seen
> on screen, but not in be seen during a slideshow or when printed.
> You can add text to a text box on screen and set it to trigger itself in an
> entrance animation, which will hide it during the show, but display it in
> print and edit modes.
> Add your text to the notes page, it will not print with the slide but will
> with the notes and can be seen in some views
> Add your text to a hyperlink and it will show when moused over during
> slideshow, but not print or be seen on the screen in edit view
> Add your text to an object tag and it will not show anywhere unless you go
> looking for it in code
> Add your text to a comment and the user can select if it should print
>
> In PowerPoint there are 4 views to consider (as opposed to 2 in Excel and
> Word): Edit (screen), Show, Notes, and print. So the question becomes, in
> what views do you not want it to be displayed, and in which do you want to
> see it?
>
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