M Mister.Fred.Ma Apr 12, 2007 #1 Seems like this is a feature has been unavailable since at least 1997. Anyone figure out a way to do this in Powerpoint 2003?
Seems like this is a feature has been unavailable since at least 1997. Anyone figure out a way to do this in Powerpoint 2003?
S Steve Rindsberg Apr 12, 2007 #2 Seems like this is a feature has been unavailable since at least 1997. Anyone figure out a way to do this in Powerpoint 2003? Click to expand... Afraid not. For tricky editing, it's probably best to use Illustrator, Corel Draw or other full-up drawing programs, if they're available.
Seems like this is a feature has been unavailable since at least 1997. Anyone figure out a way to do this in Powerpoint 2003? Click to expand... Afraid not. For tricky editing, it's probably best to use Illustrator, Corel Draw or other full-up drawing programs, if they're available.
M Mister.Fred.Ma Apr 13, 2007 #3 Afraid not. For tricky editing, it's probably best to use Illustrator, Corel Draw or other full-up drawing programs, if they're available. Click to expand... Hmmm. I didn't really consider what I was doing to be tricky. Unfortunately, I don't have access to those other applications. I wonder why this capability gap hasn't been addressed in Powerpoint over the past decade. (Actually, that's a rhetorical question).
Afraid not. For tricky editing, it's probably best to use Illustrator, Corel Draw or other full-up drawing programs, if they're available. Click to expand... Hmmm. I didn't really consider what I was doing to be tricky. Unfortunately, I don't have access to those other applications. I wonder why this capability gap hasn't been addressed in Powerpoint over the past decade. (Actually, that's a rhetorical question).
S Steve Rindsberg Apr 14, 2007 #4 For tricky editing, it's probably best to use Illustrator, Corel Draw or other Hmmm. I didn't really consider what I was doing to be tricky. Unfortunately, I don't have access to those other applications. Click to expand... I guess in this context, "tricky" means "beyond PPT's abilities".
For tricky editing, it's probably best to use Illustrator, Corel Draw or other Hmmm. I didn't really consider what I was doing to be tricky. Unfortunately, I don't have access to those other applications. Click to expand... I guess in this context, "tricky" means "beyond PPT's abilities".