Storyline: Create, Edit, and Publish Courses on Your Local Hard Drive
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The following tips will help you avoid unexpected behavior when creating, sharing, and publishing Storyline projects.
- Create, Edit, and Publish Projects on Your Local Hard Drive
- Save, Version, and Back Up Projects Frequently
- Send Projects to Other Developers When You Need to Collaborate
- Host Published Courses Online
- Optimize File Paths and Naming Conventions
Create, Edit, and Publish Projects on Your Local Hard Drive
Working with Project Files
Always save and publish Storyline projects on your local hard drive (typically your C: drive). Working on a network drive or an external USB drive can cause erratic behavior due to latency. For example, it could cause file corruption or prevent you from saving changes.
You can place a copy of your project on a network drive or a USB drive for backup purposes, but avoid reopening the file until you've moved it back to your local hard drive.
Here's a pro tip for Articulate 360 Teams subscribers: If you use a work computer and a home computer to develop courses, upload your current project to your library of shared team slides when you're finished on one computer. Then download the project from your team slides browser on the other computer and continue working. Easily upload and download team slides right within Storyline 360. Learn more.
Developers often keep course assets (pictures, videos, audio files, documents, etc.) on a network drive or USB drive. And in most cases, that's fine. However, if you see unusual behavior after importing an asset from a network drive or USB drive, it's possible the asset became corrupt as it transferred to your computer. If that happens, delete the asset from your course, copy the original asset to your local computer, then import it again.
Here are some examples of strange behavior that can occur when an asset is corrupt:
- The asset is blank, distorted, or unresponsive. For example, an image looks like an empty box, or a video refuses to play.
- Storyline says the file format isn't supported even though it is.
- The preview feature doesn't work. It loads a blank slide or doesn't load at all.
- Resources that you attach to your player are missing when you publish.
Save, Version, and Back Up Projects Frequently
Save your work often. The keyboard shortcut Ctrl+S is the fastest way to save. Do it so often that it becomes muscle memory. You’ll be glad you did.
Create versions of each project during its development cycle so you can go back to earlier versions when necessary. Just go to the File tab on the Storyline ribbon and choose Save As, then give your project a slightly different file name. For example, you might make a new version at the end of each workday and add the date to the file name so you can identify it.
Versioning is also a good way to back up your work. Save earlier versions to the cloud, a network drive, or an external hard drive for safekeeping. (But always save the current version on your local hard drive.)
Click here for more tips to avoid corrupting or losing project files.
Send Projects to Other Developers When You Need to Collaborate
If you need to share a project file with another developer, we recommend zipping it first. Then share the zipped file via email, external drive, network drive, etc. Recipients should save it to their local hard drives and fully extract it before opening the project.
If you have an Articulate 360 Teams subscription, you can upload slides, scenes, and entire projects to a library of shared team slides right within Storyline 360. It’s the best way to share slides with team members, including project templates, slides that need to be in every course, and reusable slide content, such as interactions and quiz questions. Learn more about team slides.
Host Published Courses Online
Viewing published courses on your local hard drive or a network drive isn't supported. Security restrictions in these environments can cause various features in your courses to fail.
To avoid unexpected behavior during playback, upload your courses to a web server or LMS.
The published output for a Storyline project includes multiple files and folders. For your published course to work properly, these files and folders must remain in the same organizational structure when you upload them to a server.
Here's a pro tip for Articulate 360 subscribers: When you need to test a published course or share it with stakeholders, publish it to Articulate 360, then view it in Review 360.
Optimize File Paths and Naming Conventions
Be sure the file paths to your projects and published output are well under the 260-character limit imposed by Microsoft Windows. (The publishing process adds characters to the file path you selected. If it exceeds 260 characters, your published output will be incomplete.)
Avoid using special characters, accents, or symbols in your file paths and file names. Learn more about naming conventions in this Microsoft article.