Using Button Sets in Storyline 360 #423: Challenge | Recap
What are Button Sets?
Button sets help you design activities where the user can only choose one item at a time from a bunch of items.
Say you have two shapes and each has a “Selected” state, but you only want the learners to be able to select one shape at a time. Add a button set to your two shapes and—voila!—only one can be selected at a time. Button sets are a huge time-saver as compared to triggers.
Using Button Sets with Characters
Button sets don’t apply to buttons only. You can apply a button set to almost any object on your slide: text boxes, shapes, images, characters, captions, and such. When you include an object in a button set, you’ll see that a Selected state is created automatically for that object. The Selected state shows learners visually which option is selected out of the button set. You can leave the default Selected state, or modify its look any way you want.
Using Button Sets to Simulate Multiple Quiz Questions
You probably know that inserting multiple graded quiz questions on a single slide isn't possible. However, that's okay because Storyline's flexible enough that we can simulate the effect using built-in features like button sets freeform questions. Check out the following example from Diana Myers who first shared this example six years ago in our infographics challenge.
View the example | View the tutorial
Challenge of the Week
This week, your challenge is to share an interactive demo to show how button sets can be used in e-learning.
New to Storyline or using Rise 360 or another authoring tool? No problem! You can mock up some ideas using PowerPoint or your preferred graphics program.
Resources
- Storyline 360: Working with Button Sets
Share Your E-Learning Work
- Comments: Use the comments section below to link your published example and blog post.
- Forums: Start a new thread and share a link to your published example.
- Personal blog: If you have a blog, please consider writing about your challenges. We'll link to your posts so your great work gets even more exposure.
- Social media: If you share your demos on Twitter or LinkedIn, try using #ELHChallenge so your tweeps can follow your e-learning coolness.
Last Week’s Challenge:
Before you dive into this week’s challenge, check out the creative ways course designers use isometric shapes in e-learning:
Isometric Shapes in E-Learning RECAP #422: Challenge | Recap
New to the E-Learning Challenges?
The weekly e-learning challenges are ongoing opportunities to learn, share, and build your e-learning portfolios. You can jump into any or all of the previous challenges anytime you want. I’ll update the recap posts to include your demos.
Learn more about the challenges in this Q&A post and why and how to participate in this helpful article.
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