![]() Here I’ve changed it to “Fly in from top”. Then select a different animation effect by clicking on “Fade in” at the bottom of the list. It’s also in order of you setting the animations, so make sure you start at the top and work your way down.įor the last point I’m going to add a different animation, so I select that text box. In reality, I probably would have made one text box with the first four points together and used the “by paragraph” function as described above, but this is to demonstrate a point.Īs you can see, in the Animations sidebar, I can see each animation for each point. Here I’ve animated the first 4 points in the same way. I’ve created a text box for each bullet point, which means I can animate that specific piece of text and not affect the others. For example, here I’ve decided that I want the last point to be animated in a different way to make some kind of point. ![]() If you have some points and you want to animate them in different ways, then you’ll have to do that individually. This is a great little function, that means you don’t have to animate each piece of text individually.Īnimating specific points in different ways ![]() In present mode, this will then fade in each point, one by one, after a click of the mouse button. If you want to reveal each bullet point, point by point, the easiest way is to select the “By paragraph” option. This will open the same animation menu as we saw earlier with the transitions.īy default, it gives the bullet points we’ve just selected the animation effect “Fade in”. Go to the “Insert” menu and select “Animation”. As I said earlier, in presentations you don’t want too many animations going on, so here we’ll look at a very common way to show your points one by one.įirst of all, select what you want to animate, in this case the bullet points. Now, let’s look at animating things on the slides. Here’s what the Slide from right transition looks like: Then I select “Slide from right” from the list of effects. Then I go to Change transition as before, if the animation sidebar isn’t open. First of all, I only want to add it to the comic slides, so I select the first slide (slide 4) in the slide sorter and then holding down the shift key, I select the last slide (slide 7). This time let’s add a different effect to the comic slides. Here’s a little GIF to show the difference between no transition and the Fade transition. We can also apply this effect to all the slides, which saves us having to add the same effect manually on each slide. We also have the option of controlling the speed of that transition effect, by moving the speed slider. By default, there’s no transition between the slides.Ĭlick on “No transition” and select “Fade”. Go to the “Slide” menu then select “Change transition…”. So, here we’re going to cover two main things: transitions and animations.īelow we’ll look at two situations, applying transitions and animations to presentations and also to a comic.įirst, let’s add a simple transition between our presentation slides. The same techniques allow you to add small, subtle animations to a presentation to being able to create an animated movie! Here we’ll look at making our slides come alive by adding a little bit of animation and some transitions between the slides.
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