Animations
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Introduction
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An animation is the ability to move objects in a slide
without your direct intervention during a presentation. For example,
instead of displaying the main title directly when a slide comes up, you
may want it to show one word at a time. Imagine you have a picture in a
slide but you want to introduce the picture before displaying it. To
achieve this, you can delay the picture. Furthermore, if you have a
picture with various parts, you can show these parts one at a time. Based
on this, you can see that animation can add very dramatic effects to your
presentation.
You create an animation on one slide or on some slides
of the presentation. To apply a general animation to all slides, you can
access the slide master.
To support animations, Microsoft PowerPoint provides
various options in the Slide Show group of the main menu.
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A preset animation is one that exists already as it
ships with Microsoft PowerPoint. You can just use it when necessary. To
access a preset animation:
When you select an object or text in the slide and
select a preset animation, the animation would apply to that object. When
performing your presentation and when you get to the slide, you can click
and the animation would be produced.
A custom animation allows you to consider the objects
or the text boxes in a slide, one at a time, and to animate them. To
support this, Microsoft PowerPoint allows you to identify each and apply
the desired animation to it.
To perform custom animation on one slide:
To apply a custom animation to all slides, first
access the master slide. Then, either right-click it and click and click
Custom Animation or, on the main menu, click Slide Show -> Custom
Animation...
As a high visual effect, a chart can be displayed
using a custom animation. You have two main options. To apply an animation
to a chart, you should first display the slide that contains the chart and
click the chart to select.
When a chart on a slide is selected, on the main menu,
you can click Slide Show -> Preset Animation -> Animate Chart. If
you do this, Microsoft PowerPoint would identify each part of the chart
and create a default animation to it. If you don't want the default
animation applied to a chart, you can right-click it and click Custom
Animation... In the Custom Animation dialog box, you can use the options
available in the Chart Effects property page.
When you create the animations of the various parts of
a slide, the list of animations on that particular slide is created in the
Order & Timing property page of the Custom Animation dialog box. The
list is incremental: the first object on which you created the animation
becomes number 1, the second is number 2. This is also the order they
would appear in the slide. If you want another order, you can click the
item corresponding to the animation, and then click the up or the down
buttons of the Move label.
After creating the animation on a slide or on slides, to
show its effects, by default, you must click the mouse for each animation. This
is convenient if you want to control when an animation would display.
This can
also be annoying. Fortunately, you can make an animation display either
automatically when the slide comes up or you can delay the animation for a few
seconds or minutes. This would make it come up by itself when the timing is
reached, instead of clicking the mouse. This timing effect can be set or
controlled in the Start Animation section of the Order & Timing property
page of the Custom Animation dialog box.
After an animation has occurred, its object usually displays
on the slide. If you want, you can hide text on which the animation occurred or
you can change its font color. This is controlled by the After Animation combo
box of the Effects property page.
If you plan to use sound during your presentation, you can
associate some sound effects with your animation. Microsoft PowerPoint installs
various sound effects you can use for your presentation.
To associate a sound effect with an animation, in the Custom
Animation property page, select the animation. In the Effects property page,
select a sound effect in the lower combo box of the Entry Animation And Sound
section.
So far, to move from one slide to another, we were
clicking. Moving from one slide to another during a presentation is
referred to as transition. In some cases, you can make the presentation
automatically move from one slide to another without your clicking the
slide.
To create a transitional effect from one particular
slide to the next, on the main menu, click Slide Show -> Slide
Transition... In the Slide Transition dialog box, select the desired
transition in the Effect section and click Apply. To apply a transition to
all slides, in the Slide Transition dialog box, select a transition and
click Apply To All.
While many transitions can be run fast, some others
show their effect with a medium to lower speed. To relatively control the
speed of a transition, use one of the radio buttons in the Effect section.
By default, a transition occurs when you click a slide
during a presentation. If you want, you can make the transition occur
automatically after a few seconds. This is controlled using the
Automatically After check box and its spin button.
If you want, you can associate a sound effect with a
transition. To do this, after selecting the desired transition in the Slide
Transition dialog box, select a sound effect in the Sound combo box. Each sound
effect has a certain lapse of time, usually short to make it less irritating. If
you want the sound to play continuously until it is replaced by the next
transition.
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MOUS Topics
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S14 | Modify the Slide Master |
S37 | Add slide transitions |
S38 | Animate text and objects |
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