Setting a Movie's Mouse Options
When a movie is playing, the mouse is usually moving around the screen if mouse movement has been captured. As the mouse moves, the cursor, called a pointer in Captivate, changes depending on the action being undertaken. You can modify how the mouse moves as well its speed, its sound, its visibility, and even the color used when something is clicked. You can even change the path of the mouse from one slide to the next and the shape of the mouse's path from curved to straight and vice versa.
To change the mouse pointer
1. | In Storyboard view, click Mouse in the "Slide tasks" area to open the Mouse Options pop-down menu. |
2. | Select either Project Pointers or Current Theme Pointers.You can use the Project pointers (Figure 2.31) to change the pointer used in the slide.Figure 2.31. Project pointers enable you to customize the pointer used in the movie.![]() Figure 2.32. Current Theme pointers are based upon those used in the operating system.![]() |
3. | When the pop-up menu of pointers appears, select a pointer by clicking it. |
To change the mouse pointer's size
1. | Select a slide in the Edit View panel. |
2. | Click the Mouse button on the Advanced toolbar.The Mouse Properties dialog box opens (Figure 2.33).Figure 2.33. The Mouse Properties dialog box.![]() |
3. | Select Double Mouse Size and click OK. |
4. | To change back to the normal size mouse, deselect Double Size Mouse. |
To change how quickly the mouse moves
1. | In either the Storyboard View or Edit View panel, double-click a slide containing an icon showing the presence of a captured mouse movement. |
2. | Open the timeline at the top of the Edit View panel. by clicking the down arrow beside the word Timeline.The mouse object is indicated on the timeline (Figure 2.34), and the length the mouse is visible is indicated by the duration, in brackets, and the length of the mouse span on the timeline. Also, placing the pointer on the mouse span will result in a tool tip that shows the start time of the mouse movement and the duration of the movement.Figure 2.34. Adjust mouse speed on the timeline.![]() |
3. | Click and drag the right side of the mouse object to the right to decrease the mouse speed or to the left to increase the mouse speed. |
To change the mouse's visual effect
You can change the color used in the movie to indicate a mouse click, or you can use a Flash SWF file to change the visual effect of a clicking an object in your movie. There are two that are added when you installCaptivate on your computer. Here's how to change the mouse click color and the mouse click effect:
1. | Open the Mouse Properties dialog box. |
2. | To change the color of a mouse click, select "Default click" in the "Show mouse click" area. |
3. | Click the color chip to open the Color Picker, select a new color and click OK.The new color appears as the default. |
4. | To change the mouse click effect, select "Click effect" and select one of the two options from the pop-down menu (Figure 2.35). Click the Play button (it has an arrow) to see the effect chosen in the preview area.Figure 2.35. The mouse click effect is a small Flash SWF file. Click the Play button to preview your selected effect.![]() |
5. | Click OK. |
To change the mouse click sound
1. | In either the Storyboard or Edit View panels open the Mouse Properties dialog box. |
2. | Select Mouse click sound and select a sound from the pop-down menu (Figure 2.36).Figure 2.36. You can apply sound to mouse clicks.![]() |
3. | Click the Play button to preview the sound. |
To change the mouse movement direction and location
1. | In the Edit View panel, select a slide containing a mouse movement. |
2. | Roll your mouse to the endpoint of the animation.Your cursor changes to a grabber-hand cursor. |
3. | Click and drag the pointer to a new location on the screen. |
4. | Drag the pointer to the opposite side of the start point to change the direction of the mouse movement. |
To change the mouse path to a curved or straight line
1. | In the Edit View panel, open a slide. |
2. | Click a slide with a mouse icon in the Filmstrip. |
3. | When the slide opens in the Edit View panel, click the mouse icon to open the pop-down menu. |
4. | Select Straight Pointer Path (Figure 2.37).Figure 2.37. You can straighten a curved mouse path.[View full size image] ![]() |
The "peek-a-boo" mouse pointer
Captivate's ability to relocate mouse animation on the screen is a great feature. What if you don't need the mouse to be visible in a slide? How do you align a changed mouse movement to avoid having the mouse disappear and "magically" reappear at another screen location as you move to the previous or next slide?There will be occasions where a moving pointer is unnecessary. For example, you may record a movie and discover the narration is more important than watching the pointer move. In this situation, you can hide the pointer in a particular slideor in the entire movie.
To hide the pointer
1. | In the Edit View panel, open a slide with mouse movement. |
2. | Open the Mouse Properties dialog box and deselect Show Mouse Pointer.The check mark beside the Show Mouse menu item tells you the mouse is visible. Deselect the check mark, and the mouse is gone in that frame. |
3. | In the Mouse Properties dialog box, deselecting Show mouse pointer and selecting "Apply changes to all slides" will hide the mouse for the entire movie. |
If you reposition a mouse animation, you will discover that manually positioning the mouse to line up with the exact location in the previous or next slide is virtually impossible.
To align your pointer
1. | Right-click the pointer to open the context menu. |
2. | Depending upon your need, select Align to Previous Frame or Align to Next Frame (Figure 2.38).Figure 2.38. Changes in a mouse path can be reflected in the frames on either side of the mouse path.![]() |