
Chapter 8 Using Hyperlinks in a Presentation 131
These predrawn arrows pointing forward and backward are an example of a
navigational element that can be used in a slideshow. The small, curved-arrow badge
in the lower corner of each one indicates that it’s been made into a hyperlink.
The small blue arrow (visible only
while you’re editing a slide) means
the item is a clickable hyperlink.
This text box has also been made into a hyperlink as indicated by the same curved-
arrow badge in its lower-right corner. But the text below displays an underline,
indicating that the text is an inline hyperlink.
Use hyperlinks to trigger any of the following actions during your presentation:
Jump to a particular slide. Â
Open a webpage in the computer’s default web browser. Â
Open another Keynote document. Â
Open an email message. Â
Exit the slideshow. Â
Opening a Page in a Web Browser During Your Presentation
You can add a hyperlink that opens a webpage in web browser that’s been set up as
the default browser for the computer on which the slideshow is played.
To add a hyperlink that opens a webpage:
1 Select the text or object that you want to turn into a hyperlink.
If you type text that starts with “www” or “http” (or copy it from another document),
the text automatically becomes a hyperlink. To turn o this feature, choose
Keynote > Preferences, click Auto-Correction, and deselect “Automatically detect email
and web addresses.” This setting is computer specic, so if the document is opened on
a computer with a dierent setting, that computer’s setting is used instead.
2 Click Inspector in the toolbar, click the Hyperlink inspector button, and then select
“Enable as a hyperlink.”
3 Choose Webpage from the Link To pop-up menu.
4 Type the webpage’s address in the URL eld.
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