Our free PDF converter is the best solution for converting PowerPoint to PDF files. With our easy-to-use PowerPoint to PDF converter, you can quickly convert your PowerPoint presentations to PDF format while preserving the precise formatting and layout of your slides.

You can continue to use our online PowerPoint to PDF converter for free, or sign up for a paid subscription for instant and limitless access to our full suite of tools. Added benefits include converting multiple PPT or PPTX files at the same time and unlimited file sizes.


Powerpoint To Pdf Convert


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As long as you can access the Internet, you can turn PPT and PPTX files to PDF whenever you need them, and you can access our other file conversion tools, too. Additionally, our PowerPoint to PDF converter works on any device or OS, like Mac or Windows, that can upload and download files.

After your PowerPoint file has been successfully converted, our PPT to PDF converter automatically deletes any remaining PPT, PPTX, or PDF documents, just in case you forgot to delete them manually to ensure your data remains secure.

While you can view and work with presentations created in older versions of PowerPoint, you might get improved performance and additional features if you convert those presentations to the latest PowerPoint (.pptx) file format.

After conversion, you are prompted to save the converted presentation. If the original presentation is a PowerPoint 97-2003 (.ppt) presentation, that original is preserved alongside the new file. If the original is a PowerPoint 2007 or PowerPoint 2010 presentation (.pptx), the file is replaced if you give the converted presentation the same file name and extension.

If the Convert command doesn't appear, the presentation content is up-to-date, and converting is not required. The Convert command appears only if one of the following is true about the presentation:

There's not an automatic way to convert a Story Map to Powerpoint. You can print Story Map Journals and Story Map Cascades to PDF Files, but to create a Powerpoint you'd have to do quite a bit of manual work.

I need to complete a project that requires automatically splitting a pptx into multiple image files. I have a flow working where I can convert a file into a pdf as an intermediate step, and I can split the pdf into little pdfs that contain each slide. I'm also using third party apps for this purpose (the conversion and splitting step), and ideally we wouldn't want to use them (we want to keep only the Microsoft services in Flow). Is there any other way to achieve the flow we're looking for?

Really not sure what stack site to place this on. Feel free to move it to the correct one. My question isn't really related to programming, but I have a ton of power points with these "Worksheet Objects" embedded in the slides. Some appear to be graphs from excel as well as other chart type items from Visio. I need to convert all these "Worksheet Objects" to just images within the slide.

My process right now is copy the object > Paste as Image > Move to the correct location > Delete the "Worksheet Object". It's a very time consuming and tedious process. Is there a macro I can write or something that can convert all these objects automatically? I tried googling and no luck so far

I have a file with a huge number of objects. Hundreds of freeform shapes are grouped together to form several icons. I am wondering, is there an easy way to convert these groups of freeform shapes into just one object?

I have a school project and my group used canva to make the slides, however, it is a requirement to convert them to PowerPoint slides. When we did so, all of our animations, as well as many of the animations/gifs we used from canva were missing or corrupted. I tried to just download the missing animations from canva into my laptop and then inserting them into the ppt but their transparent backgrounds would end up as white. Any way I can fix this? Thanks

If you have a narrated PowerPoint Presentation to convert into a video (MP4 file) and are using the desktop version of PowerPoint, please note to give this plenty of time to export to a video file.

What's the easiest way to convert your 4:3 slide deck to 16:9 in a pitch and still have your images look nice? There' s a number of ways on the internet but they all involve "math" and "ratios" and "thought." Nonsense. Too hard. Here's what I do.

I've gone through the steps indicated in the provided links, but still unable to resolve. Is it possible to remove and re-install the Nitro Pro 11 printer driver? I have had another user with a similar problem present today. In his case, when he attempts to combine or convert, the powerpoint slide is 'shrunk' by about 25-50%. Switching to a real, hardware printer and the print size returns to normal.

I designed a presentation in Indesign and had to convert that into a PowerPoint file so I had to export the Indesign file as a pdf and then from Acrobat, convert it into a PowerPoint presentation. Most things translated over fine, but the text and some background images were distorted and the fonts were changed completely, even though the fonts are downloaded and available across all platforms on my computer. Can anyone advise on this? I want to do as little editing as possible after spending a ton of time designing it in Indesign. Any input would be appreciated, thanks!

Yes, when I exported the presentation as a pdf and then converted it to a powerpoint, things started shifting and the text was completely different. There is no compatibility between the two programs, but I just wanted to know if there were any shortcuts. Turns out there isn't! Thank you though!

Indesign is wonderful for presentations and I definitely prefer it over powerpoint, but the issue became about access on other computers, hence the conversion to powerpoint. Powerpoint isn't bad, but any conversion from adobe to microsoft is a major pain. Thanks all!

I don't think you even looked at the plugin I mentioned. It perfectly converts INDD to powerpoint files. I understand the need for powerpoint files in a business setting, they are just terrible to work with in my opinion. Here is a link:

By the same principle, if I hired a designer to do some work I needed delivered in InDesign format, and they said they only have QuarkXpress, but can produce an InDesign-convertible file with it, I'd look elsewhere.

I never would turn away the work. Recosoft allows me to set up everything I need in a much more designer friendly way in InDesign, and with the click of a button create a perfectly editable and converted powerpoint file. It may need some tuning in powerpoint which is no issue, but building a 70 slide presentation with a limited interface, limited graphical capabilities, and a lack of customization seems counter intuitive when you use Adobe products day in and day out.

The file produced by Recosoft is built as if it was natively constructed in Powerpoint. If you are more comfortable with powerpoint more power to you, I just would make the argument of more time being spent on a presentation because of the lack of tools at your disposal would actually cost you more time, and make you charge a client more, who may not return after the higher pricing.

I am trying to convert a bunch of MS Powerpoint files from ppt to PDF files. However, I am finding that a lot of files are not being rendered correctly. At first I thought it was something I was doing wrong since I was doing the conversion headless. I opened the same files in Impress and I see that they are still not rendering properly. Since this needs to be an automated process, I cannot open files and modify them.

Thanks for the initial response, but as I mentioned this needs to be an automated process to convert to PDFs - these will not even be my files. Do you, or does anyone else know of a way to programmatically fix this so the files render properly?

I see online conversion utilities that can render this properly. I am only assuming they are using something like libreoffice to convert, but is there a another tool that may be better suited to convert PPT to PDF (or JPG)?

Geetesh: Jamie, can you tell us about the new feature in your BrightSlide add-in that lets you convert a path copied from Illustrator or created in PowerPoint into a motion path for animation? How was the idea born and what were the challenges in making this conversion?

With this information in hand, we were able to write a translation algorithm that takes the coordinates of a shape and converts them to the coordinates required for a motion path. That is then applied to the shape to be animated using the new Paste as Motion Path feature in our free BrightSlide add-in.

You can use Rise 360 to give your Keynote presentations a fresh, modern makeover. For example, check out how I converted a 3-slide PowerPoint presentation into a beautiful Rise 360 course in this discussion. Is that what you had in mind?

Many thanks for your quick reply Jason! Yes, I did save it as .ppt (powerpoint 1997-2003). I also deleted the code in the macro box before pasting in your code. It may have to do with the way I created the macro menu. I am also new to Beamer. Thanks!

Use the IsDate function to determine if date can be converted to a date or time. CDate recognizes date literals and time literals as well as some numbers that fall within the range of acceptable dates. When converting a number to a date, the whole number portion is converted to a date. Any fractional part of the number is converted to a time of day, starting at midnight.

A CVDate function is also provided for compatibility with previous versions of Visual Basic. The syntax of the CVDate function is identical to the CDate function; however, CVDate returns a Variant whose subtype is Date instead of an actual Date type. Since there is now an intrinsic Date type, there is no further need for CVDate. The same effect can be achieved by converting an expression to a Date, and then assigning it to a Variant. This technique is consistent with the conversion of all other intrinsic types to their equivalent Variant subtypes. 2351a5e196

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