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PowerPoint contains many useful features for adding interactivity to your
presentations. Obviously interactivity is rarely appropriate for a slide
show presented by a speaker to an audience, but it can enhance and add interest
to self running kiosk style presentations. If you are unfamiliar with the
basic features of PowerPoint you should first look at the
Introduction to PowerPoint tutorial.
Two easy types of interactivity that can be included into any PowerPoint
presentation are navigation and feedback. For navigation, you can use
onscreen buttons and text for a branching structure, allowing the user to
visit the sections as they wish or to provide the option to gain more
information on topics of interest. For feedback, slides can present
questions and offer choices of answers.
Examples could be:
 | User inputs a name, which is
used in feedback or included into a storyline.
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 | User answers some questions
and is given feedback as to the number of correct answers. |
 | Objects are added to slides. |
 | Text is added to or modified
on slides. |
 | Text colour, font, size, or
style is modified. |
Start with navigation and follow the links
on each page to the next page and you will be creating interactive
slide shows in no time.
Where to from here?
This web has only scratched the surface of what you can
do with VBA. David Marcovitz' tutorial from the references page
is quite detailed and a useful next step. Following that the
Visual Basic Help, which can be accessed when working in the VBA editor,
is a comprehensive reference.
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