Camtasia Studio 4: The Definitive Guide (Wordware Applications Library)

MenuMaker’s Main User Interface

Once you’ve gone through the project creation dialogs, you’ll end up inside MenuMaker’s main interface window. In it, you’ve got a view of what your menu will probably look like, complete with a background image as well as your menu items displayed in a List Box. Additionally, you have:

We’ll discuss the different menu items as they come up in the menu creation process, but to whet your appetite about the kinds of capabilities you can expect from this handy program, here’s a quick rundown of the functions on the Camtasia MenuMaker toolbar, in order from left to right:

The wizard does a pretty reasonable job of assembling all the essential elements of your menu, and if your navigation needs are simple, you may be able to go straight to the testing and final creation of your menu without any further tweaking. But what would be the fun in that? We’re going to move on to discuss the Main Menu Properties dialog, where you can add files and submenus, and choose from a wide variety of options to alter the look and feel of your menu. But first, let’s talk briefly about the menu’s List Box.

The List Box is where all your menu items are displayed on the menu screen. Every menu item gets its own line, and if the number of menu items exceeds the amount of space that the List Box has to offer, small arrow bars will appear at the top and/or bottom of the box as needed to let you scroll through the entire list of items. It looks like this:

The user can scroll through a list of 40+ items, even if the box only has enough space to display five at a time.

The size, color, opacity, and location of the List Box are all determined by the template you’ve chosen. The box can be transparent, opaque, or somewhere in between, and it comes in a glorious array of colors. And yes, all of these items can be changed. The two properties that can be directly manipulated from the main screen are the List Box’s size and location. This works just like PowerPoint or any other vector-based graphics program you’ve ever seen. Click and hold over the box, and then drag it around to move it. To resize, click and hold one of the box’s eight handles (those little black boxes that dot its border), and drag to expand or shrink the box.

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