PowerPoint Tips Blog

Helping you with presenting, PowerPoint, and speaking

  • Home
  • Blog
  • Tips
  • E-Store
  • Training
  • About
  • Affiliates
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Bblog
Home » Create invisible buttons

Create invisible buttons

August 8, 2001 by Ellen Finkelstein 2 Comments

READ LATER - DOWNLOAD THIS POST AS PDF >> CLICK HERE <<

In a discussion with Dr. Pavel Samsonov, a professor at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, the topic of invisible buttons came up. I had encountered them before, so I thought I would explain.

Invisible buttons are AutoShapes with no fill and no line that have a hyperlink attached to them. You use them for two purposes:

  • If you’re navigating through the presentation, you may want your navigation to seem invisible to create a magical effect. The button may be small or may cover the entire slide.
  • If viewers are navigating themselves, you may want them to be able to click anywhere on a slide to execute the hyperlink. In this case, the invisible button covers the entire slide.

For example, let’s say you create a quiz that students will navigate by themselves. You may add hyperlinks from a question slide to a Correct and Incorrect slide, depending on which answer the person clicks. Then, you can hyperlink the Correct slide to the next question and the Incorrect slide back to the original question so viewers can try again.

By covering the entire Correct and Incorrect slides with an invisible, rectangular AutoShape, students just click anywhere to get to the right place.

To make the process easier, attach the hyperlink to your rectangle before you make it invisible. Then double-click it and use the Format AutoShape dialog box to change the line to No Line and the fill to No Fill.

In PowerPoint 2007, invisible buttons made this way don’t work! Instead, you need to make the fill 100% transparent. Click the Format tab and then the Shape Fill drop-down list. Right-click the shape and choose Format Shape. In the Fill pane, drag the Transparency slider all the say to the right, and click Close.

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Share
Tweet
Share
0 Shares
READ LATER - DOWNLOAD THIS POST AS PDF >> CLICK HERE <<

Related posts:

  1. Easily create a quiz in PowerPoint using Visual Basic for Applications
  2. Use timing, animation, or sound in a presentation with hyperlinks
  3. Using a Summary Slide for a Question & Answer Session
  4. Create a simple border

Filed Under: Hyperlinks Tagged With: buttons, PowerPoint, PowerPoint 2007, presentations, slides

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
guest
2 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
A Helpful Friend
A Helpful Friend
13 years ago

this didn’t work! explain why?

0
Ellen
Ellen
13 years ago
Reply to  A Helpful Friend

No idea, you don’t give enough details. I don’t examine presentations, so see if you can figure out where it went wrong by testing at each stage.

0
wpdiscuz   wpDiscuz

Free Video Training!

13 Techniques that Will Make Designing Your Slides EASY!

And get the PowerPoint Tips Newsletter with tips and resources for presenters. Plus 5 bonus tips!

BirdSend Email Marketing Tool

PresenterMedia

1-on-1 Presentation Coaching

Recent Posts

Recent Posts:

Recent Posts

  • Format multiple headshots for consistency
  • Creating beautiful process diagrams with a teardrop shape
  • Using abstract images to create unique backgrounds for slides and shapes
  • What can online course creators learn from other sectors?
  • Engage your audience with triggers

Connect with me!

Connect with me!


Twitter LinkedIn Facebook

Search the site:

Search the site:

Ellen Finkelstein, Inc. · Fairfield, IA · Tel: 515-989-1832

Privacy, Refund, and Other Legal Stuff

wpDiscuz