Here's an easy-to-customize custom glossary slide for your next project. It's built on a single slide and features an intro layer, plus a layer for each letter.
I have been using this template to enter vocabulary for my English courses and today suddenly the text I enter is not displayed and the audios I enter are not played, why do you think this is? a couple of days ago I updated the storyline version and I don't know if they are now incompatible.
I have been using this template to enter vocabulary for my English courses and today suddenly the text I enter is not displayed and the audios I enter are not played, why do you think this is? a couple of days ago I updated the storyline version and I don't know if they are now incompatible.
Hi, Michael, I didn't see your question until just now, because I don't subscribe to all of my posts. I hope you've already figured out the answer, but I'll explain it for future readers. The Player Features area includes icons for adding and editing features. In my Storyline Glossary file, I removed the built-in glossary. In it's place, I added my own Glossary feature and gave it a trigger to open the glossary slide as a lightbox. This thread doesn't allow me to add an image, but you can find one in this thread, where I repeated this info: https://community.articulate.com/discussions/building-better-courses/free-download-custom-glossary-slide-40a10aba-cb7c-4076-8fcb-757843155cec
Thanks to the Articualte staff for adding this to Downloads. FYI: •There's an Intro layer, plus a layer for each letter. •For demo purposes, I disabled the Q, X, and Z buttons to show how simple it is to turn off letters you don't need. •There's also a Programming Instructions layer. That's not visible to users; it's just there to provide more details about how the slide works.
If I wanted to build this and also provide a PDF as a terms glossary/index, can Storyline automate that? Or is the PDF a completely separate article needed to be manually created?
Thanks, Ryan. Unfortunately, you'll probably have to manually create any companion PDF. Well, if you have minimal definitions, I suppose you could publish the Glossary slide into Word, tweak that file as needed, and then save it as a PDF. But you're probably better off just copying and pasting the text.