Next you modify the original button symbol. The changes you make will be automatically applied to all the button instances in your nav bar.
You may be wondering what the original button symbol looks like now that you changed the text on several of its instances.
The Button Editor appears with the original button symbol and text displayed in the workspace. The original button symbol is still intact and displays the original text.
When you changed the text of each button in the workspace, you only edited a button instance. If you make any changes here to the rectangle or to text appearance, you will be editing the original symbol, so those changes will be reflected in all the instances in the workspace.
To select the rectangle, select the Subselection tool (or press A) and carefully select the outline with 4 selection points, not the one with six. If the name of the object in the Property inspector is "Button rectangle," you successfully selected the rectangle.
The rectangle is now orange.
Each button's Over state is now orange. You changed only the button symbol, but the change was applied to all the button instances in your nav bar.
You decide to change the appearance of the text in the button symbol.
To select the text, select the Subselection tool (or press A) and carefully select the outline with 6 selection points, not the one with four. If the name of the object in the Property inspector is "Button text," you successfully selected the text.
Examine the various button states in the Button Editor. The text changes in one state are reflected across all the button states. Compare this to when you changed the font; you had to change it in each state. That's because you can apply different graphical and text attributes to each state of a button. This is useful if you want the text color to change when a user rolls over a button, for example.
The font on each button instance changes to reflect the new font selection, but the text remains the same. Button instances reflect only the changes you make to a button symbol's graphical appearance, including its text attributes, but not changes you make to the text itself.
Button symbols enable you to change the graphical appearance of all button instances in a nav bar quickly, while preserving each instance's unique text.
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