You can hide built-in player tabs like Resources and Menu on a slide-by-slide basis, but there isn't a way to hide custom player tabs. I'll let our team know that feature would be helpful for you! Thanks for reaching out. 😊
Thank you. Also a mailto: optin that actually works would be helpful. I
use the syntex as a hyperlink in Word and PowerPoint it works fine. But
when I use it as a button it does not work
Go figure. Also you need to be able to simplify creating a certificate
and get WYSIWYG printing.
I have an email account created in Outlook. Where would one configure allowing HTML and Javascript to run. I send email in HTML format, as configured in the Outlook Options Tab.
Delmar M. Kerr
65 River Heights Drive
Cleveland, AL. 35049
Buckeye.Delmar@gmail.com (205) 446-7877
Delmar, thanks for clarifying! Outlook is listed in the document referenced above as a supporting program of both JavaScript and HTML, but any set-up requirements would need to be handled with that software's support.
Your learners will also need to make sure they have an email client installed on their machines. And be sure to test in the final environment where the content will be hosted (e.g. LMS or web server).
One more thing - when you reply via email, it includes your signature with contact information. You can edit it out here!
7 Replies
Hi Delmar!
You can hide built-in player tabs like Resources and Menu on a slide-by-slide basis, but there isn't a way to hide custom player tabs. I'll let our team know that feature would be helpful for you! Thanks for reaching out. 😊
Thank you. Also a mailto: optin that actually works would be helpful. I
use the syntex as a hyperlink in Word and PowerPoint it works fine. But
when I use it as a button it does not work
Go figure. Also you need to be able to simplify creating a certificate
and get WYSIWYG printing.
Hi Delmar! Thanks for that feedback.
Regarding the mailto: link, have you tried using the "send email to" trigger?
Yes I have. That is why I am so upset because it should work.
I understand Delmar. The right resources must be in place for this to work properly. You can read more in our documentation here.
I have an email account created in Outlook. Where would one configure allowing HTML and Javascript to run. I send email in HTML format, as configured in the Outlook Options Tab.
Delmar M. Kerr
65 River Heights Drive
Cleveland, AL. 35049
Buckeye.Delmar@gmail.com
(205) 446-7877
Delmar, thanks for clarifying! Outlook is listed in the document referenced above as a supporting program of both JavaScript and HTML, but any set-up requirements would need to be handled with that software's support.
Your learners will also need to make sure they have an email client installed on their machines. And be sure to test in the final environment where the content will be hosted (e.g. LMS or web server).
One more thing - when you reply via email, it includes your signature with contact information. You can edit it out here!
This discussion is closed. You can start a new discussion or contact Articulate Support.