I have a shape (rounded rectangle) in PowerPoint 2007 of which I would like to increase the vertical size only (to illustrate de-bottlenecking). So, the width will stay the same but the height will grow (both from the top and bottom, so the centre will remain in the same location).
Custom Animation -> Emphasis only appears to change the whole shape.
Is it possible to increase only the vertical size (stretch the shape)?
This is during animation of the shape.
Answer
No there's not, but you can approximate this visual using two objects
I don't think there's a native way to do what you're looking for, but this work-around might give you the same visual effect. This technique relies on creating two shapes: one for the starting size and one for the ending size, and then animating the end shape. Also, it may look better with a squared edged box, although I know you're using a rounded one.
- Create a box that will be your starting size, set the fill color as appropriate and turn off the border.
- Create a second box at the right size and location for the end state, set the fill and border the same as object #1, and layer it behind object #1.
- Set the following animation parameters on the 2nd object:
- Set the entrance effect to "split"
- Set the direction to either "horizontal out" or "vertical out" (which will depend on the motion you want and the object orientation)
When you preview the animation, you should see object #1 in the foreground and object #2 growing out from behind it straight up and down.
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