How to automatically scroll using Powerpoint (like a teleprompter)

Anonymous
2023-10-12T16:40:44+00:00

I'm trying to use Powerpoint on my laptop to scroll text like a teleprompter, as explained in this video:

"Go to the "Animations" tab in PowerPoint and click the "Lines" icon. Click on the "Effect Options" icon, then select "Up" and set the "Sequence" to "As One Object." Press the "F5" key on your keyboard to play the presentation, which begins scrolling the text immediately."

https://smallbusiness.chron.com/make-computer-teleprompter-33250.html

When I go to the "Animations" tab, however, there is no "Lines" tab. I'm using 2019 Office Home & Student. Does this version not have this feature? Is there a way I can scroll using my version?

Microsoft 365 and Office | PowerPoint | For home | MacOS

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  1. John Korchok 224.4K Reputation points Volunteer Moderator
    2023-10-12T17:06:31+00:00

    That's a poorly-written article. They meant that on the Animations gallery, you should choose the Motion Path called Lines.

    Here's a similar article, but with all the steps spelled out: Use PowerPoint as a Teleprompter Scroll down to the How to Create a Working Teleprompter in PowerPoint heading to see the animation steps.

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  2. Jim G 134K Reputation points MVP Volunteer Moderator
    2023-10-12T17:17:23+00:00

    Hi

    The general idea they have is OK, but they left out a lot of steps that you must perform in order to get the (pretty spectacular I must say) result you want.

    Let me provide instructions that are more complete for the basic setup:

    Open a new, blank slide in PowerPoint.

    On the Home tab of the Ribbon, in the Slides group, click the Office Theme button and choose Blank.

    On the Insert tab of the Ribbon in the Illustrations group click Shapes > Text box and then drag a text box onto the empty field.

    Right-click on the border of the text box and choose Format Shape. I found these settings appropriate for the amount of text I planned to use. VERY important is to check the box for Wrap Text in Shape.

    Image

    Type or paste the text you want to be read aloud into the text box. Adjust the position and size of the text box so that the top of the box is at the top of slide and the width is the same size as the slide area. Text can be and most likely will be past the bottom of the slide as much as you want.

    Right click on the border of the Text box and on the Home Tab of the Ribbon format the text as white. Set the font size to something you think will be easy for someone to read as the text goes by. I went with a value higher than 48 points, but the size is up to you and depends somewhat on the display you're going to use.

    Right-click on the slide background, choose Format Background and choose to fill with solid black.

    Right click on the border of the text box to select the text box again, then on the Animations tab of the Ribbon, in Entry Effects apply the credits animation.

    Play the slide and when you click the mouse or press the right-arrow on the slide, your animation should play.

    Duplicate the slide and change the text and you have a wonderful teleprompter.

    6 people found this answer helpful.
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  3. Anonymous
    2023-10-12T18:23:55+00:00

    Yikes! Looks complicated. But I'll try it. In the meantime, I've also read that there is an autoscroll function in MS Word, but once again, I cannot find it in my version of Office Home & Student 2019 for Mac. Would that be simpler?

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  4. Jim G 134K Reputation points MVP Volunteer Moderator
    2023-10-13T17:30:48+00:00

    Hi

    It's really not that complicated.

    You make a text box having the text you want to scroll, format it (if you want) to be white text on a black background, position and size it nicely on the slide and add the credits animation to the text box.

    You are correct. AutoScroll is no longer available in Word for Mac.

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  5. Anonymous
    2023-11-14T04:51:20+00:00

    Thanks John - this is the solution. The 'Credits' animation has limitations in the amount of text it will scroll and leaves you having to parse out your text into the right size chunks and hoping it all scrolls at the same speed as the slides progress - pretty average.

    This motion path option is great. It's a little fiddly if you have a lot of text but I managed to fit a 4 minute monologue into a text box in very large text so I could see it from my position in front of the camera and it works great!

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