Posts Tagged ‘buttons’

Icons Disappeared

Tuesday, May 10th, 2011

Recently one of my subscribers wrote to me complaining that she was having a “weird” problem with MS Word.  Boy! Have I heard that before!

She told me that she had created macros and assigned them to a toolbar in MS Word. She did this on her computer at home and liked them so much that she decided to take them to her office as well. She transferred her macros by copying her Normal.dot file. But to her dismay, her custom toolbar buttons did not make the trip! The buttons did show up on her work computer but they were blank, with no pictures. And to confound the issue, she could not create any custom toolbar buttons on her work computer!

MS Word stores your macros in template files. If you store your macros in the Normal.dot template and then copy that template to another machine witht he same version of MS Word, those same macros are available on that machine as well.

Changes to your toolbars are also stored in templates. Custom icons (such as buttons), however, are not stored in templates. They are stored in the Registry, so they are not easily transferred from one computer to another.

To remedy this problem, I advised her that she could copy her Normal.dot file to her work computer and reset the toolbar completely using the Customize feature found by clicking on Tools | Cutomize | Toolbars tab. She could then try to add the buttons from scratch and then customize the icons. If this did not work for her, it may be because she didn’t have the proper permissions on her work computer to write to the Registry. In that event, she should check with the IT Administrator of her company for assistance.

Versions 97, 2000, 2002, 2003

MS Word 2007 WordArt

Sunday, October 5th, 2008

WordArt is different than SmartArt in Word 2007 – it creates goofy text strings that you are not able to edit.

In MS Excel and PowerPoint it can be used as a powerful tool to embed text with special effects.

You can find it on the Insert tab, but in Excel and PowerPoint you use the Format tab to change the look of the text.  You can even make buttons with it!

Action buttons can be added to a presentation to make it interactive, and used as a tool to move to the next or previous slide or to even end your presentation.

To add an action button to your presentation, follow the steps below:

  1. Display the slide onto which you would like to place actions buttons in Slide view.
  2. From the Slide Show menu, select the Action Buttons option.
  3. Make sure you select the appropriate icons; the icons for action buttons are found on the second row.

Shapes

  1. A cross hair will appear on your slide (looks like a cross), draw the icon to the size you would like.
  2. The Action Settings dialog box will open; select whether you would like your slide to move:
  3. When you click the mouse on the button (you have more control with this option)
  4. Or when you roll the mouse over the button
  5. Select from the drop-down menu what you would like to happen when the button is clicked.
  6. You can ignore the other commands.

  1. Click OK.

Now, in Slide Show view when you click on the button, it will do whatever you set it to do. Note that it will not work in any other view.

Pretty cool though isn’t it?