"ydoumorph" <ydou...@email.msn.com> wrote in message news:OAwG743oCHA.2752@TK2MSFTNGP09...
Sonia Coleman, Microsoft PowerPoint MVP Team
http://www.soniacoleman.com
(Autorun CD Project Creator & Free Templates)
http://www.soniacoleman.com/Tutorials/PowerPoint/acdpc_instructions.htm
http://www.soniacoleman.com/Templates.htm
"ydoumorph" <ydou...@email.msn.com> wrote in message
news:uwAjsK5oCHA.1888@TK2MSFTNGP09...
"Sonia" <sc...@nowherebuthere.com> wrote in message
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"ydoumorph" <ydou...@email.msn.com> wrote in message
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See http://groups.google.com/groups?selm=MPG.17bb2c92fc38958298a73f%
40msnews.microsoft.com for more.
--
Regards,
Tushar Mehta
www.tushar-mehta.com
Microsoft MVP -- Excel
--
In <OAwG743oCHA.2752@TK2MSFTNGP09>, ydoumorph <ydou...@email.msn.com>
wrote
"Sonia" <sc...@nowherebuthere.com> wrote in message
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"Sonia" <sc...@nowherebuthere.com> wrote in message
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"Tushar Mehta" <ng_p...@bigfoot.com> wrote in message
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"ydoumorph" <ydou...@email.msn.com> wrote in message
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"ydoumorph" <ydou...@email.msn.com> wrote in message
news:erdRIzTpCHA.2384@TK2MSFTNGP09...
It's unfortunate that MS changed without warning in 2002 how it
resolved this conflict. That, however, doesnt' change the fact that
the underlying conflict is not new. What might be better is for MS to
*disallow* these conflicting instructions in the first place.
You have to decide what you want to do. For a self-presented show, it
would make more sense to using timings. For a person-presented show,
it would make more sense to wait for clicks.
To set a slide to move on a click, use the same dialog box as when
setting the time for transition.
--
Regards,
Tushar Mehta
www.tushar-mehta.com
Microsoft MVP -- Excel
--
In <#mGOJAUpCHA.1888@TK2MSFTNGP09>, ydoumorph <ydou...@email.msn.com>
wrote
>
>It's unfortunate that MS changed without warning in 2002 how it
>resolved this conflict. That, however, doesnt' change the fact that
>the underlying conflict is not new. What might be better is for MS to
>*disallow* these conflicting instructions in the first place.
>
I'd like to respectfully disagree with the idea of disallowing this ( having
both timings and clicks for slide transitions and etc.) Sometimes you want
the slide to appear for no longer than a certain time but want to have the
option to move it along faster if the full time is not necessary. Then you
need both methods -- the click being the method of moving it along. I have
used this numerous times in things I've done.
Maybe there need to be three options -- all mutually exclusive:
click only
timing only
timing and click (with timing overriding unless there is a click)
Just my experience and two cents --
BJ
Of course, given how much influence I have over PPT design features,
there should be no worry about MS actually acting on my suggestion. <g>
--
Regards,
Tushar Mehta
www.tushar-mehta.com
Microsoft MVP -- Excel
--
In <Fg-dnfLk8ov...@comcast.com>, bj@notyour <bj@notyour> wrote
"Tushar Mehta" <ng_p...@bigfoot.com> wrote in message
news:MPG.18691d6ff...@msnews.microsoft.com...
Set the "real" slide to automatic (animation and transition) and the
"shim" slide to manual (animation and transition).
That's the only way around it I'm aware of.
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Echo [MS PPT MVP]
http://www.echosvoice.com
Yes. On a per slide basis, you can set the Slide Transition. Go to the Slide
Transition task pane with one slide selected, and uncheck the Advance Slide
Automatically After... checkbox. Do not hit the "Apply to All Slides"
button. The presentation will not automatically advance through the slide
(or slides if you want to apply this to multiple slides) you have selected.
If you want to stop in the middle of a slide, then the way you do that is to
use the workaround and create a "shim" slide in the way that Echo suggested:
1) Duplicate the slide you want to stop in the middle of.
2) Delete all custom animation effects and content that you don't want to
show on the first part of the slide.
3) Set the slide transition to No Transition. This will make the transition
to your "paused" slide unnoticeable.
4) Delete all the custom entrance effects, etc. that you don't want to
repeat on the second slide so that the transition works the way you want it
(using the "Start Slide show from current slide" command which is the third
button from the left under the thumbnail view is very handy here).
5) Set the paused slide to not automatically advance.
6) Be VERY careful from this point on to not change your transition effects
over the pair of slides.
> I've been working on this Christmas Cantata wherein a portion of the
> slideshow will be timed to music. For that part I have several slides
with
> picture sequences embedded and animated in each slide. After the several
> songs have completed I need to have the slideshow pause and await for the
> manual 'on click' resumption of the show (There will be breaks where there
> will be someone doing storytelling with no slides involved, after which
the
> slideshow must be resumed. That is where I need to have the proceed 'on
> click' slides). However, I have found no way to pause the automated show
to
> wait for the click. I hope that gives a clearer picture of what I am
> attempting. Perhaps I'll miss the production window though. Any further
> help will be appreciated.
This description was rather helpful in ascertaining what you wanted to do.
Good luck.
--
-Mike Fried
PowerPoint Development Team
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