How To Create Click-able Check Mark Boxes In Powerpoin

  • Thread starter Thread starter Guest
  • Start date Start date
G

Guest

Does anyone know how to create those click-able check mark boxes in
powerpoint (i.e. the kind you click on and the circle turns dark to signify
you selected that option, "yes" or 'no", rate on scale of 1 to 10, etc). I
know you can create a field to do it in word, but not sure in powerpoint.
Thanks in advance.
 
How about,

Draw a circle, select a color. Then under animations > emphasis and
lighten/darken/change the color.



Austin Myers
MS PowerPoint MVP Team

Provider of PFCPro, PFCMedia and PFCExpress
www.playsforcertain.com
 
Thank you for your feedback. Unfortunately, I might not be explaining myself
as clearly as I should. I am creating a survey in powerpoint that will never
be viewed as a presentation or slide show, hence I won't be using any
animations. People will type in their answers for questions and then for the
section where they need to rate a response between 1 - 10, ideally they will
select the dot that represents that number (like on a multiple choice test
where you have to fill in either A, B, C or D. Except in this case there are
ten small circular symbols (no fill), that I would like someone to be able to
click on and then it would fill (click again & it would unfill) If fill is
to difficult, when they click it, a checkmark could appear inside the circle.
Hopefully that makes sense.
Thanks in advance for your help.
 
Thank you for your feedback. Unfortunately, I might not be explaining myself
as clearly as I should. I am creating a survey in powerpoint that will never
be viewed as a presentation or slide show,

A problem, that. When in any view other than slide show viwe, PPT doesn't respond
to clicks on shapes in any way that'd help you here.

On a VBA user form you could probably do something like what you're after, but it
seems you're after a cross between "radio buttons" and check boxes.

The behavior (click on, click off, a toggle) sounds like a check box, but these
are square, not circular. Each checkbox is independent of the others, though. In
other words, a user could choose as many or as few as they liked (unless you wrote
code to connect the behavior of several of them).

A radio button array allows the user to select any one answer from however many
buttons there are.

hence I won't be using any
 
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