Honestly, no. My experience says the best way to learn if come up with a
small project and then jump in with both feet and use the reference material
as you work through it. In other words, On the job training. <g>
Austin Myers
MS PowerPoint MVP Team
Provider of PFCMedia, PFCPro, PFCExpress
http://www.pfcmedia.com
> Hi,
> I am interested in learning vba. Does anyone know of any video cd's that
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
> to write your own codes.
> Thank You
From a teacher standpoint, fellow MVP (and professor), David Marcovitz has
written a book. You can check out free examples as well as purchase the
book at:
http://www.loyola.edu/edudept/PowerfulPowerPoint/

Signature
Bill Foley
Microsoft PowerPoint MVP
Microsoft Office Specialist Master Instructor
www.pttinc.com
> Hi,
> I am interested in learning vba. Does anyone know of any video cd's that
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
> to write your own codes.
> Thank You
David M. Marcovitz - 03 Jan 2007 14:40 GMT
What Bill said and ...
This partly depends on what you want to do with VBA. If you want to learn
the whole language for the sake of the challenge, there are several books
out there (I did a lot of learning with a book by McFedries). However, if
your goal is to create interactive PowerPoint stuff, the books that I
have seen don't really cover that. That is one reason that I wrote my
own. It will get you started, but you'll quickly zoom through it and then
have to come back here to get questions answered.
--David

Signature
David M. Marcovitz
Microsoft PowerPoint MVP
Director of Graduate Programs in Educational Technology
Loyola College in Maryland
Author of _Powerful PowerPoint for Educators_
http://www.PowerfulPowerPoint.com/
> From a teacher standpoint, fellow MVP (and professor), David Marcovitz
> has written a book. You can check out free examples as well as
> purchase the book at:
>
> http://www.loyola.edu/edudept/PowerfulPowerPoint/