As Phil has mentioned above, blocks don't exist as such in Storyline, so you have to build your own. However, with a bit of tweaking, most things are possible. The attached example replicates the Process Block from Rise in Storyline using layers and triggers, with a few state changes thrown in for good measure to control the appearance of the additional menu option on the bottom of the screen.
You should be able to follow what I have done in this example, but if you have any queries, please don't hesitate to get back to me.
Thanks Phil. I tried the Engage option but it didn't import nicely into Storyline and it made the Storyline file pretty slow too. This problem could actually be due to the recent Parallels desktop upgrade.
If adding an object to your Storyline file slows the project down, I would check to make sure all the files are located on your local drive. Keep us updated!
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You can use Engage which has a process, if not everything in storyline is built from scratch.
As Phil has mentioned above, blocks don't exist as such in Storyline, so you have to build your own. However, with a bit of tweaking, most things are possible. The attached example replicates the Process Block from Rise in Storyline using layers and triggers, with a few state changes thrown in for good measure to control the appearance of the additional menu option on the bottom of the screen.
You should be able to follow what I have done in this example, but if you have any queries, please don't hesitate to get back to me.
Thanks Phil. I tried the Engage option but it didn't import nicely into Storyline and it made the Storyline file pretty slow too. This problem could actually be due to the recent Parallels desktop upgrade.
Hello T D!
If adding an object to your Storyline file slows the project down, I would check to make sure all the files are located on your local drive. Keep us updated!
Thanks Phil. I tried the Engage method but on importing it made my Storyline file extremely slow and sluggish. Might have to recreate in Storyline.
Thank you Ned
Thanks Lauren. The files are on the same computer. Do you mean the same directory? Thanks!
Greetings, t d!
You're spot-on. We recommend to save and publish project files on your local directory (C:).
If there's anything else we can answer in the meantime, please let us know!
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