EDN Admin
Well-known member
Hello the Microsoft community,
I have inserted a slideshow with e .pps entension in a Word document that I intend to send to a teacher as part of an assignment that I have to hand in Monday tops.
Im running into a difficulty as to assign a macro code to the "object" inserted in the Word document, namely the slideshow, to display it in full-screen mode.
WHAT I WOULD LIKE IS THAT THE TEACHER, WHEN MARKING MY ASSINGMENT, READS THE WORD DOCUMENT AND CLICK ON THE SLIDESHOW WHICH OPENS AUTOMATICALLY IN FULL-SCREEN MODE OR RATHER IN .PPS MODE (NOT COMPLETELY FULL-SCREEN MODE).
I DO not know what the macro code is and how to do it for a Word document intended to sent via email to the teacher.
I have the 2007 professional POWERPOINT version and I4M running on Vista 32 bits home basic.
I think that my question is explicit enough for anyone to understand what I want to do.
I would really appreciate a quick answer from someone who is conversant enough with the VBA language applied to Powerpoint.
Yours sincerely,
Jerome R.
"Life is a friend, hold her in your arms and she will guide you by the the heart."
View the full article
I have inserted a slideshow with e .pps entension in a Word document that I intend to send to a teacher as part of an assignment that I have to hand in Monday tops.
Im running into a difficulty as to assign a macro code to the "object" inserted in the Word document, namely the slideshow, to display it in full-screen mode.
WHAT I WOULD LIKE IS THAT THE TEACHER, WHEN MARKING MY ASSINGMENT, READS THE WORD DOCUMENT AND CLICK ON THE SLIDESHOW WHICH OPENS AUTOMATICALLY IN FULL-SCREEN MODE OR RATHER IN .PPS MODE (NOT COMPLETELY FULL-SCREEN MODE).
I DO not know what the macro code is and how to do it for a Word document intended to sent via email to the teacher.
I have the 2007 professional POWERPOINT version and I4M running on Vista 32 bits home basic.
I think that my question is explicit enough for anyone to understand what I want to do.
I would really appreciate a quick answer from someone who is conversant enough with the VBA language applied to Powerpoint.
Yours sincerely,
Jerome R.
"Life is a friend, hold her in your arms and she will guide you by the the heart."
View the full article