Create and apply an "excerpt" style

jmt356
SilverLounger
Posts: 2381
Joined: 28 Mar 2010, 01:49

Create and apply an "excerpt" style

Post by jmt356 »

I am working on a PPT presentation with several excerpts. Whenever I enter an excerpt, I want it to appear in Tahoma Heading 20, light blue, with no bullets. Is it possible to create a style called "excerpt" and to assign this style to each excerpt, as I can do in Word, without having to manually format every excerpt.
Regards,

JMT

User avatar
HansV
Administrator
Posts: 78370
Joined: 16 Jan 2010, 00:14
Status: Microsoft MVP
Location: Wageningen, The Netherlands

Re: Create and apply an "excerpt" style

Post by HansV »

As far as I know, PowerPoint does not have the concept of a style as in Word.
You can create a slide with the formatting that you want for an excerpt in the Slide Master. Whenever you need an excerpt, insert the excerpt slide.
Best wishes,
Hans

User avatar
ChrisGreaves
PlutoniumLounger
Posts: 15576
Joined: 24 Jan 2010, 23:23
Location: brings.slot.perky

Re: Create and apply an "excerpt" style

Post by ChrisGreaves »

HansV wrote:
04 May 2021, 07:02
As far as I know, PowerPoint does not have the concept of a style as in Word.
Ah! But quite obviously at least three of us do! Have the concept of a Style, I mean.

I would argue that a Style is a name that can be applied to text (usually), and so I recorded a "Macro1"

Code: Select all

With ActiveWindow.Selection.TextRange.Font
    .Name = "Courier New"
    .Bold = msoTrue
    .Italic = msoTrue
    .Color.SchemeColor = ppAccent1
End With
which runs with text pre-selected and sets the text to Bold, Italic, Blue, Courier New, for want of a better choice (I'm still on my first coffee).
This is, of course, PowerPoint 2003, and I had a quick look for shortcut keys but didn't look too far; just ran the macro from a toolbar.

I've written PPT/VBA. years ago, and so I suppose that one could write code that retrospectively ran this macro against suitable chunks of text across a presentation.

Cheers
Chris
There's nothing heavier than an empty water bottle