Give learners a sense of progress with this easy-to-customize tabs template. Make it your own by swapping out colors and characters, switching up the placeholder logo (courtesy of freepik.com) and font (Open Sans).
It's easy to add tabs to this template just by duplicating an existing tab and a corresponding layer. Adjust the triggers for your new tab to trigger the new layer and you're good to go!
Hi Trina, I just started using your AMAZING template and I can only think that a gremlin accidentally animated a slide and now I can't remove it. Can you help if I post it?
OK I'll figure out how to upload it and then you can check it out. Be kind, it's my first Articulate course and will not be anywhere as near as fabulous as the magic that you and others share here, but you are all really helping me grow my skills!
Angela, you can post your question in the Storyline forum here (https://community.articulate.com/forums/articulate-storyline). Myself or one of our community members will gladly take a look. And just to reassure you, E-Learning Heroes is a totally noob-friendly space so don't sweat it! We're all learning from each other.
Hi Trina! This is a great resource! I'm having trouble though. I created a trigger that once all of the tabs have been visited, the user advances to the next slide. However, the instant the student selects the last tab, it goes to the next slide rather than showing the information about the last tab. So all of the tabs have to be visited before the next slide is seen, but the minute the user clicks the last tab, it advances the slide without showing the last tab's information. How can I fix this?
Hi Roger. Apologies for the delay in responding to you. The built-in "Visited" state will change automatically the moment the button is clicked, whether the actual layer has been viewed or not. You can delete this state and create a custom state called "Completed" and then use a variable to track whether each layer's been viewed before that state change occurs.
This forum discussion (https://community.articulate.com/discussions/articulate-storyline/visited-state-showing-too-early) offers a fuller explanation and examples that may be of help.
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