Yes, by finding/inventing the alternatives. Long ago during my college year in Macroeconomy class my lecturer has announced that there would be a topic presentation and each group should make Powerpoint presentation and are limited to certain number of slides (10 slides, maybe, I couldn’t remember accurately). Our group had lots of things to describe, the more content you describe the more scores you get, so instead of limiting and cherry picking our content I suggested to my team that we put tons of valuable content in one slide, in the form of slide show animation, heaping one animated content over the next one as much as possible, rinse and repeat for each slides, and there you go, we were able to deliver lots of valuable content in the form of animation, even covering what other teams after us would say. We didn’t violate the lecturer’s rules, we outsmarted him! (Although I ended up doing the animation since it was my idea and for my team mates to agree with the idea).