PowerPoint Programming

Everything about PowerPoint programming including VBA, VSTO, and more.

See Also:
PowerPoint and Presenting Notes
PowerPoint and Presenting Glossary

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Friday, April 26, 2013, posted by Geetesh Bajaj at 4:00 am

First a little history. This started with our Stop Underlining Your Descenders! article. Of course, as per that article you can manually remove underlines from all characters such as g, j, p, q, and y that sport descenders. However, the task of individually selecting characters to remove underlines is fine if you need to do so for an important slide title or just your opening slide.

Remove Underlines from Descenders

What if you want to do the same task for an entire presentation, as shown in just one slide below?

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Friday, November 16, 2012, posted by Geetesh Bajaj at 4:15 am

No Longer Working?

This code no longer works in PowerPoint and is retained for archival reasons.

Have you created a huge monster PowerPoint file that’s hundreds of megabytes in size or even a gigabyte? The culprit may be any videos you have inserted on your slides! In years gone by, we always recommended that users place their videos (or any other media or linked files) in the same folder as their PowerPoint presentations so that the links to video files worked when you moved the presentation to another computer. You could then just copy the entire folder to another computer!

VBA Code: Change Embedded Videos to Linked?

PowerPoint 2010 changed everything! Rather than linking videos, the default option was now to embed the videos as part of your PowerPoint file. And that’s how it has been for subsequent releases of PowerPoint, including versions 2011 and 2016 on Mac, and versions 2013 and 2016 on Windows.

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Friday, August 17, 2012, posted by Geetesh Bajaj at 11:00 am

Jamie Garroch
  
Jamie Garroch, CEO of GMARK Ltd., founded the company in 2009 to provide presentation professionals with PowerPoint software, content and training. Jamie uses PowerPoint for most of his graphic needs, for everything from designing logos to creating web banners and even printed marketing collaterals. He also uses PowerPoint as a programming environment to create custom programming procedures and PowerPoint add-ins.

In this conversation, Jamie discusses what the upcoming PowerPoint 2013 offers developers, and about the rumors that apps will replace add-ins soon.

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Monday, August 13, 2012, posted by Geetesh Bajaj at 8:19 am

Steve RindsbergSteve Rindsberg has been associated with PowerPoint since the product originated more than two decades ago — his PowerPoint FAQ site is a treasure trove of PowerPoint information. When he’s not updating his site, he’s creating new PowerPoint add-ins that expand possibilities within PowerPoint. Steve’s also into a lot of print technology related stuff.

In this conversation, Steve discusses what the upcoming PowerPoint 2013 offers developers, and about the rumors that apps will replace add-ins soon.

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Friday, July 20, 2012, posted by Geetesh Bajaj at 4:05 am

Do you want to remove all animations from your slides? You may want to remove animations for a variety of reasons: maybe the sequencing is all messed up, and starting all over again seems like a great idea. But one look at your Animations task pane reveals tens or hundreds of animations on each slide. Is there a magic button somewhere in PowerPoint that can get rid of all animations all together?

Yes, you can do this easily in PowerPoint using some simple VBA code, as John Wilson of PowerPoint Alchemy explains. John adds that this only removes animations from individual slides, and not any animations added within the Slide Master.

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