J
Jeff
MS writes:
"Hello,
PowerPoint does not have the specific capability that you
are looking for.
Although some defaults can be customized (such as using
the Options dialog)
other defaults (such as fill color) are presentation
specific and cannot be
set as a global default.
If you (or anyone else reading this message) think that
PowerPoint should
provide more control over various default behaviors,
settings, etc. ...send feedback please to Microsoft at..."
1. What does this mean? While it is not easy to do,
eventually I discovered--with the suggestions of helpful
others--how to set the default fill to blank. Does MS
believe that this is impossible (without having to resort
to VBA or 3rd party add-ins)?
2. Perhaps the larger question is, why would MS create a
default format for a circle or a square that is filled
with turquoise? How bizarre! After manually reformatting
to remove the bizarre turquoise fill coloring a few
hundred times, I learned how to default to an "ordinary"
(e.g., empty*) circle or square. But who was the twisted
programmer who reasoned that every new object should be
made to be turquoise? Is he or she working on even more
bizarre defaults for future releases?
(Of course, something has to be the default. But surely,
while 1 person in 100 may decide to default fill with
white, and 1 with black, the other 98 would reason that a
circle is a circle and doesn't need any colorful interior
color at all. Certainly not a purple, chartreuse or
turquoise one!)
"Hello,
PowerPoint does not have the specific capability that you
are looking for.
Although some defaults can be customized (such as using
the Options dialog)
other defaults (such as fill color) are presentation
specific and cannot be
set as a global default.
If you (or anyone else reading this message) think that
PowerPoint should
provide more control over various default behaviors,
settings, etc. ...send feedback please to Microsoft at..."
1. What does this mean? While it is not easy to do,
eventually I discovered--with the suggestions of helpful
others--how to set the default fill to blank. Does MS
believe that this is impossible (without having to resort
to VBA or 3rd party add-ins)?
2. Perhaps the larger question is, why would MS create a
default format for a circle or a square that is filled
with turquoise? How bizarre! After manually reformatting
to remove the bizarre turquoise fill coloring a few
hundred times, I learned how to default to an "ordinary"
(e.g., empty*) circle or square. But who was the twisted
programmer who reasoned that every new object should be
made to be turquoise? Is he or she working on even more
bizarre defaults for future releases?
(Of course, something has to be the default. But surely,
while 1 person in 100 may decide to default fill with
white, and 1 with black, the other 98 would reason that a
circle is a circle and doesn't need any colorful interior
color at all. Certainly not a purple, chartreuse or
turquoise one!)