You copy and paste the following code into the macro (module): Sub SlideMasterCleanup()įor j =. To create a macro, do the following (It’s not as scary as you think):Ģ/ In the Macro name: dialog box at the very top left, type a name for the macro (Type anything like “asd”, it doesn’t matter!).ģ/ In the Macro list on the right-hand side (5 down), click create (see above).Ĥ/ In the Description box, delete the lines of code that come up (the Sub stuff) and then copy paste the macro code in (it’s in the next section).ĥ/ Code looks like this. You could do the manual thing and manually check one by one, or you could use magic to do it in seconds. Only which ones did you use, and which did you not? You don’t want to accidentally delete ones that you used. You have used 10 master slides and don’t want people to see the 140 you are not using when sharing a PowerPoint file.
Maybe you have a bunch of proprietary master slides you don’t want to share beyond the ones you are sharing with someone. Ok, so you bought a template and it has 150 master slides. I’ve started using it and thought to make a quick blog to teach you. This is a random tip, but something you probably will never know that you can do. Here is a macro to remove them in seconds You want to share the file and don’t want all the master slides to be shared. Tl dr: You have a template or have made a lot of master slides you don’t use.