We are close to the final boss timings of slides. This will be very important because this will determine how long the video will be when you export it. On the transitions tab, I told you that if you select the transition, for example, the fate or any other, you have the duration of one second, and we have timing of slides. If you create a video, you most often want to instead of selecting on mouse click, you want to select after a certain amount of seconds. This is also convenient if you do presentations you can make it after a certain amount of seconds. This goes to the next slide.
Now watch this. We have animations here. Three point 25 seconds and then another animation which starts at 25 and it goes endlessly. You must know that animation overrule timing of a slide, which means animations have have to finish until you can go to the next slide. Look at that. Let me select that this slide should continue after two seconds to the next slide, but we have more than two seconds of animations on it, what will happen?
Well, you know what will happen because animations have to finish only then this slide can continue. When it comes to endless animation, at least one iteration of this animation has to end. So one loop, one point 25 seconds of this animation, so start two to 375. It takes one second and 25. So 4.5 seconds have to pass before this slide can possibly continue to the next slide. And why do you want to use the timings and transitions and remember that you have a day One second of Hayden.
If you want this second this video to be nine seconds or 10 seconds long, you just work with this. Look at that. We need to make it at least five seconds, because we have 4.5 seconds of animation. So no matter if we placed four seconds, three seconds, two seconds, it will anyway play the animations to the end. I hope this makes sense so far. But after that, we have complete freedom.
We can make the video seven seconds long. We can make the video 12 seconds long. It's completely up to us. Let's make it seven seconds and see what happens. This entire video, this entire one slide would have eight seconds of duration. Why?
Because we have seven seconds on slide and one second have a faded. Look at that fading 1234 567 go see, well, I cannot count seconds perfectly, but you get the idea. If I would make this slight transition to 10 seconds, it would make 123 about three or four of those posts animations, and then it will continue one second fade in 1-234-567-8910. Whoo. See, this is how well I'm again pointing my hand at the monitor but you are watching the monitor because I'm recording it. This is how it works.
So I want you to get familiar with the timing. I want you to open PowerPoint. Take one slide, no matter if this slide is animated or not. No matter if you add a transition to this slide, or you select None. I want you to select after and play around with the amount of seconds See what happens. Why do I not use a mouse click.
I do not use one mostly because I want to have control over this video. I want to select by myself how long this presentation will last. And this will come perfectly clear in the next lectures when I show you how to export videos. I'm really excited for this moment. So see you in a brief moment.