Adobe Captivate 5.5: Math Made Easy

by Kevin Siegel Follow us on Twitter View our profile on LinkedIn

So I'm working with a text caption in Adobe Captivate and the font size is 16 points. I'd like the font size to be twice as big. For many developers, figuring out what the font size should be if it's supposed to be twice as big as 16 points is easy… 16×2=32.

What's that you say? Math isn't your friend… not your thing? Most computers on the face of the Earth have a free, built-in calculator. (On Windows XP, choose Start > Run > Calculator. On Windows 7 or Vista, choose Start and type Calculator into the Search box. On the Mac, press [F4] on your keyboard.) And I'm willing to bet that just about every mobile device and tablet you can buy today has a built-in calculator.

Of course, if you use any of the devices mentioned above to calculate a desired font Size, you'll still need to return to Captivate and type the new Size within Captivate.

You can save a bit of time if you let Captivate do the heavy lifting for you. Here's how…

Select a text caption and, on the Character group, highlight the font size in the Size field as if you were going to type in a specific font Size. However, instead of typing in a specific size, use the standard math operators for multiplication, addition, subtraction or division. You'll find that in addition to calculating the math for you, the desired font size will also be applied to the text within the selected caption.

In the image below, I started with a font size of 108 points. My client wanted the font size to be one-third that size. There was simply no way I was going to be able to quickly do the math in my head. (I know, I know… you could easily do the math in your head… but not me.) No worries… it was a simple calculation on Captivate's Properties panel: 108/3 is 36 points. 

Changing a font size using math operators in Adobe Captivate.

Go ahead and give it a shot on your own. You'll find that you can use an asterisk for multiplication, a forward slash for division and a plus or minus sign for addition or subtraction.

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Looking to learn Adobe Captivate 5 or 5.5? We offer Beginner and Advanced classes. Both Windows and Macintosh developers can attend these classes.

Adobe Captivate 5.5: The Hidden Font Size Menu

by Kevin Siegel Follow us on Twitter View our profile on LinkedIn

Changing the font size of selected text is a simple thing to accomplish in Captivate. All you need to do is select a text caption (or highlight some text within a text caption). On the Properties panel, Character group, type the desired font size and press [Enter] on your keyboard.

Have you noticed what's missing on the Character group? It appears that you cannot select a font size from a drop-down menu like you can in most other applications.

But looks can be deceiving. While there isn't a traditional font-size drop-down menu, you can in fact scroll through a list of font sizes.

With a text caption selected, move your mouse pointer over the current font Size on the Properties panel (Character group). Don't click inside the Size field… just move your mouse pointer over the field.

Notice that your mouse pointer becomes a hand-mouse pointer and a horizontal arrow. 

Captivate's Font Size scroll pointer.

With your mouse pointer looking like the image above, drag your mouse right to see larger font sizes; drag your mouse left to see smaller font sizes.

As you drag left or right, the font size will increase or decrease by one point. If you want to use a specific font size, simply stop dragging once the size appears and release the mouse clicker.

Note: The largest font size in Captivate is 720 points; the smallest font size is 1 point.

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Looking to learn Adobe Captivate 5 or 5.5? We offer Beginner and Advanced classes. Both Windows and Macintosh developers can attend these classes.

Adobe Captivate 5.5: Resizing is a Snap, But Watch Your Anchor

by Kevin Siegel Follow us on Twitter View our profile on LinkedIn

In the image below, I've drawn two objects on a Captivate slide. Clearly the object on the left is much larger than the one on the right. I'd like both objects to be the same size. In fact, I'd like the smaller object to grow larger to match the size of the object at the left.

Two objects, different sizes.

While it might be tempting to delete the image on the right and simply duplicate the existing object, there is a little-used option in Captivate that I'd like to share.

Select the objects you'd like to be the same size and choose Modify > Align > Resize to the same size.

Resize to the same size.

And bam… you get this:

Resized objects.

What's that you say… you got this?

Resized... but smaller.

Take a look at the very first image above and notice that the object on the left has white resizing handles. In the image directly above, the object on the right has the white resizing handles.

When aligning or resizing multiple slide objects, the object you select first becomes the anchor. The anchor will neither move nor resize when you apply Captivate's align and/or resize commands. In the first image, the object on the left is the anchor; in the image above, the object on the right is the anchor.

Spend some time with Captivate's align and resize commands (via the Modify menu or by right-clicking. Among the standard align and resize options, you'll also find some handy slide-alignment options. These options can prove handy should you want, for instance, selected objects to be perfectly centered on a slide.

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Looking to learn Adobe Captivate 5 or 5.5? We offer Beginner and Advanced classes. Both Windows and Macintosh developers can attend these classes.

Adobe Captivate 5.5: Flash Player Version Aversion

by Kevin Siegel Follow us on Twitter View our profile on LinkedIn

One of the big decisions you will need to make during the Publish process (File > Publish) is which Flash Player to choose from the Flash Player Version drop-down menu.

Captivate 5.5 sports three versions of the Flash Player: 9, 10 and 10.2. While the Flash Player 10.3 was released back in May 2011, it is currently not available in the menu.

Flash Player Version drop-down menu.

Which Flash Player should you choose? According to Adobe statistics, Flash Player version 10 and below is in use in 99.2% of the world's mature computer markets (mature markets include the US, Canada, UK, Germany, France, Japan, Australia and New Zealand). Flash Player version 10.3 is in use in 40.5% of those same markets.

With the numbers above in mind, it make sense to select Flash Player 10 from the Flash Player Version drop-down menu. Right? Not so fast. In my experience, many companies and government agencies are still using Flash Player version 9 (with no plans to upgrade anytime soon).

Learners attempting to open a SWF published to a more recent version of the Player than what is installed on their computer will be unable to view the lesson. While some of those learners will be prompted to download the newer version, they may or may not be able to actually install the current Player (depending on their admin rights). In other cases, learners using an older version of the Player will simply see a blank, white page. Ouch!

During my Captivate classes, I encourage students to play it safe when it comes to the Flash Player Version and select one full version lower than what is offered. By selecting an older version of the Player, users who have the newer version of the Flash Player will still be able to consume your content, as well as those with the older version of the Player.

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Looking to learn Adobe Captivate 5 or 5.5? We offer Beginner and Advanced classes. Both Windows and Macintosh developers can attend these classes.

Adobe Captivate 5.5: The Fastest Angle Remover in the West

by Kevin Siegel Follow us on Twitter View our profile on LinkedIn

You may have noticed that Captivate 5.5 allows you to quickly change the angle of a slide object by dragging the free-rotate icon you will find just above any selected object.

Free rotate

While rotating an object is great, getting rid of the rotation can get a bit sticky if you try to use the free-rotate icon. Most people will nearly remove the rotation, but are surprised to find that a slight angle remains.

There are two painless ways to remove the rotation (the Angle). First, with the rotated object selected, expand the Transform group on the Properties panel and change the Angle to 0.

Remove a rotation using the Transform group on the Properties panel.

Sure, using the Angle field on the Transform group is easy. But I am always looking for easier. Select a rotated object and, instead of dragging the free-rotate icon at the top of the object… double-click it. And bam! That Angle is instantly reset to 0. No dragging. No typing. Just a simple double-click and done.

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Looking to learn Adobe Captivate 5 or 5.5? We offer Beginner and Advanced classes. Both Windows and Macintosh developers can attend these classes.

Adobe Captivate: Quick Clicks and You’re Texting to Speech

by Kevin Siegel Follow us on Twitter View our profile on LinkedIn

The ability to convert text to speech using Captivate's built-in text to speech agents is awesome. All you need to do is select the slide note(s) you want to convert and then click the Text-to-Speech button.

Assuming you have installed NeoSpeech (a program that come with Captivate but needs to be installed manually), you will be able to choose from any one of five voices from the Speech Agent drop-down menu.

In addition to the five voices you get with Captivate, any voices that have already been installed on your computer will also appear in the Speech Agent drop-down menu. In the image below, Microsoft Anna, which comes with Windows, is also listed among the Speech Agents. 

After selecting an agent, all you need to do is click the Generate Audio button to convert the selected text to an audio file. Simple! Of course, if you follow these simple steps, you won't get the agent you were hoping for in the generated audio.

In the image below, notice that I have selected Kate from the Speech Agent drop-down menu. However, Microsoft Anna is shown at the right of the dialog box. Most new Captivate developers (and even some vets) miss this little detail. If I were to click the Generate Audio button now, I'd end up with an audio file containing Microsoft Anna, not Kate.

Kate selected as the Speech Agent

There is one subtle thing you have to do before selecting an agent and then clicking the Generate Audio button: click just above the text you'd like to convert and ensure the space above the text turns gray (see the image below).

Kate re-selected as the Speech Agent.

If you miss this one simple click, you won't be using the agent you want… instead, you'll be using the default agent (which, as shown earlier, would have been Anna for me).

Adobe Captivate 5 & 5.5: Avoid the Heart Attack… Put It Back!

by Kevin Siegel Follow us on Twitter View our profile on LinkedIn

I was teaching a session on Adobe Captivate at a conference when I performed an action I have performed at least a thousand times… I opened the Advanced Interactions dialog box (via the Project menu).

While this was  a routine action, the result was anything but routine. The Advanced Interactions dialog box did not appear on my screen and Captivate appeared to crash. I could move my mouse around the screen, but if I tried to click anywhere, I heard an alert beep. Nothing was working in Captivate and I was stuck. This was perfect timing. There were only a few hundred people staring at me. And I'm pretty sure that more than a few attendees were enjoying the show as I squirmed and tried to troubleshoot the issue.

I noticed that if I pressed the [Escape] key on my keyboard, I could continue to work within Captivate, but trying to open that pesky Advanced Interactions dialog box caused my system to freeze each time.

The first thing I tried to do was reset Captivate's Classic workspace (Window > Workspace > Reset Classic). While that seemed like a reasonable course of action, it didn't resolve the issue.

And that's when it hit me. I use two huge monitors in my office (yes, I'm spoiled). When I was at the conference, I was plugged into the conference-supplied overhead–essentially a single huge monitor.

I remembered that when I was last in my office, I had opened the Advanced Interactions dialog box and dragged the dialog box from my main monitor to my second monitor. I had done what I needed to do in the Advanced Interactions dialog box and I had clicked OK.

I did not drag the dialog box back to my main monitor–and I had never needed to worry about doing so in the past. But for whatever reason, Captivate was acting as if I was still working with that second monitor, even though the monitor was not at the conference with me and wasn't listed in my system Display Preferences.

Thankfully there was a second monitor in the room, sitting just to my left on the table. I quickly plugged the second monitor into my laptop and BAM!… the Advanced Interactions dialog box showed up on the second monitor.

Given the fact that I've heard about this issue from several Captivate 5 developers, I would urge you to be diligent when working with dual monitors. If you move something to that second monitor, drag it back to the main monitor… especially if you are going on the road and you're not planning on taking the second (or third) monitor with you.

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Looking to learn Adobe Captivate 5 or 5.5? We offer Beginner and Advanced classes. Both Windows and Macintosh developers can attend these classes.

Adobe Captivate 5 & 5.5: That Syncing Feeling

by Kevin Siegel Follow us on Twitter View our profile on LinkedIn

When developing eLearning with Adobe Captivate, saving unnecessary clicks is always a goal. With that in mind, I rely on keyboard and other shortcuts whenever possible to avoid clicking and dragging my mouse. Here's a little-known shortcut that can potentially save you a ton of clicks over the long haul.

Take a look at the image below. There are two objects on a slide and they appear as blue bars on the Timeline. Above the Timeline is a series of tick marks indicating fractions of a second. I clicked on a tick mark near 1.5 second and a red bar appeared. The red bar is known as the Playhead.

Adobe Captivate Playhead

I'd like the top caption on the Timeline to appear on the slide just before the 1.5 second mark. In fact, I'd like the caption to appear at the exact time indicated by the playhead shown above.

To accomplish the task, I could drag the caption's Timeline object to the left until its left edge lines up with the desired time. I could also use the Timing group on the Properties panel to control when the caption appears on the slide. But there is a way to get the job done that is faster than either of those two techniques.

Assuming that the Playhead has been positioned on the Timeline, right-click the caption on the slide and choose Sync with Playhead.

Synch with the playhead.

Now check out the Timeline. The selected object has automatically moved left and is lined up (synced) with the Playhead.

Object synced with the Playhead.

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Looking to learn Adobe Captivate 5 or 5.5? We offer Beginner and Advanced classes. Both Windows and Macintosh developers can attend these classes.