I prefer to use PowerPoint to make courseware, one time a chemistry teacher asked me to help him solve the problem: use PowerPoint to show an empty table, and then dynamically fill in the form as the experiment progresses.
Because a table inserted in PowerPoint is typically a table or Excel worksheet in Word, this table is a whole, so you can't dynamically set the contents of a cell. Through repeated practice, the problem has been solved, the specific methods are as follows:
1. Draw the table manually
Click the Line button on the Drawing toolbar to draw the table manually on the slides you want to insert into the table.
2. Fill in the form
Click the Text Box button on the Drawing toolbar, draw the text box in the cell, and then enter the contents in the text box, repeating the steps above to complete the form.
3. Set up animation
Click the slide Show/Custom Animation menu, select the text object for which you want to set the animation in animation-free slide objects, and then click the Effects tab to set the effect. Use the same method to set the part that requires dynamic padding. Adjusts the order in which text is filled in animation order. By using the above method, the table can be dynamically populated under the control of the presenter.