Selecting an element from a set of stacked obscured elements

J

jas0501

One might consider this a bug or at least a lost feature.

Problem: How do I select an obscured object, one that is under other objects?

I'm tring to to a simple flip card type animation with all elements the
same size stacked on top of eachother. Once they are stacked there is no way
to select just one of them. Prior Powerpoint versions supported object
selection from the animation window that also selected the object in the
slide window.

PP 2002 does not seem to provide this functionality. The object selection
does not carry back to the slide window.

Anyone have any suggestions? Moving all the other elements, one at a time,
to get to the particular one is clumsy.

Thanks in advance.
 
T

tohlz

Select the object, then press tab/ shift+tab to go through the rest of the
objects. Does that help?
--
====================
http://www.pptheaven.xs3.com
PowerPoint Heaven - The Power to Animate
Contains tutorials on creating amazing animations for your PowerPoint
Presentations.
====================
 
G

Glen Millar

Hi,

Also, the Layer Manager in the Start Set from www.pptools.com has this
feature, but I think it is in the purchased version.

--

--
Regards,

Glen Millar
Microsoft PPT MVP
www.powerpointworkbench.com

Australia

Please tell us your PowerPoint version,
whether you are using vba,
whether your dog has fleas, or
anything else relevant.
 
S

Shyam Pillai

You can try the free Shape console tool on the following page:
http://skp.mvps.org/sconsole.htm.

It will create a miniature resizable window which shows which shapes have
been selected. When you tab thru the shapes in a stack it will update it's
preview.
 
E

Echo S

In addition to all the other answers, I just created a Camtasia capture of
how Select Multiple works for the folks at Techsmith. I can send you the WMV
if you want -- it's a few MB, though! Drop me an email if you want it.

Otherwise, there are screenshots of Select Multiple here:
Selecting shapes that are covered by other shapes
http://www.rdpslides.com/pptfaq/FAQ00504.htm

(Ute already gave you this link, though.)
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top