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by sickn33 · Updated Apr 16, 2026

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A user may ask you to create, edit, or analyze the contents of a .pptx file. A .pptx file is essentially a ZIP archive containing XML files and other resources that you can read or edit. You have different tools and workflows available for different tasks.

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See It In Action

1 turns·claude
The project codebase is in your current working directory. Explore the files to understand the code before making changes. need this partner deck checked before rehearsal — pull the slide text and tell me if there are hidden notes/comments or any weird off-brand theme fonts/colors

Good, unpacked successfully. Let me now read all the key files: slides, notes, comments, and the theme.

Here's the full audit of partner-deck.pptx:


📑 Slide-by-Slide Text

#TitleBody text
1Strategic Partnership ProposalNexus Dynamics × Acme Corp · Q2 2026 — Confidential
2Market OpportunityGlobal enterprise integration market valued at $42.8B (2025) · Projected CAGR of 23.7% through 2029 · Top 3 verticals: Financial Services, Healthcare, Retail · Combined TAM for our joint solution: $6.2B · Nexus Dynamics currently holds 8.3% market share in middleware · Acme Corp API gateway adoption grew 340% YoY
3Proposed Integration RoadmapPhase 1 (May–Jun 2026): API connector prototype & security audit · Phase 2 (Jul–Aug 2026): Beta with 5 design partners · Phase 3 (Sep 2026): GA at Nexus Connect · Phase 4 (Oct–Dec 2026): Tier-2 marketplace listings · Key dependency: Acme Corp v4.0 SDK release (targeted June 15)
4Financial Terms & ProjectionsRevenue Share: 18% to Acme on joint deals · Min Annual Commitment: $2.4M · Eng Investment: $850K (60/40 split) · Expected Y1 Revenue: $14.2M · Break-even at Month 9 · 3-Year Forecast: Y1 $14.2M → Y2 $31.6M (+123%) → Y3 $58.9M (+86%)
5Next Steps1. Legal review of NDA + partnership agreement (by Apr 18) · 2. Technical deep-dive — Nexus + Acme eng leads (Apr 22) · 3. Exec alignment call — go/no-go (Apr 25) · 4. Joint press release draft if approved (May 1) · Contact: Jordan Blake, VP Partnerships — jordan.blake@nexusdynamics.io

🚨 Hidden Speaker Notes (3 found — all highly sensitive)

SlideNote content
Slide 2"INTERNAL — Our market share numbers are from the 2024 analyst report. DO NOT share the updated Q1 2026 figures until legal clears the discrepancy with the SEC filing. The real number is closer to 6.1%, not 8.3%."
Slide 4"Negotiation floor: we can go as low as 12% rev share if Acme pushes back. Do NOT mention this unless they reject 18%. Also the $850K eng investment estimate doesn't include the contractor budget — actual cost is ~$1.2M."
Slide 5"Jordan said the NDA is basically done. If they ask about exclusivity, deflect — we're also talking to Pinnacle Systems but that's not public yet."

⚠️ These notes would be visible to anyone who opens the file in PowerPoint and checks the Notes pane (or prints with notes). They contain negotiation strategy, non-public financial data, and a reference to parallel talks with Pinnacle Systems. You should strip all three notes before sending this deck externally.


💬 Comments (2 found — still unresolved)

DateAuthorComment
Apr 10Marcus Webb"Should we include the NDA status slide? Legal might want visibility on where that stands before the exec demo."
Apr 11Lisa Chen"Need to verify these timeline dates with engineering before the demo — Phase 2 beta might slip to September if the v4.0 SDK is delayed."

These will show in PowerPoint's comment sidebar. Resolve/delete before presenting.


🎨 Theme Fonts & Colors — Issues Found

Fonts — 🔴 Two joke fonts in the theme definition

RoleFont set in themeProblem
Major (headings)Comic Sans MSUnprofessional; applied to the Slide 2 title explicitly
Minor (body)PapyrusUnprofessional; applied to the Slide 4 "3-Year Revenue Forecast" subhead explicitly

These are baked into theme1.xml as the default heading/body fonts, meaning any new text box you add will inherit them. Two slide-level overrides explicitly use them as well:

  • Slide 2 title → <a:latin typeface="Comic Sans MS"/>
  • Slide 4 "3-Year Revenue Forecast" → <a:latin typeface="Papyrus"/>

Colors — 🟡 Two suspect accent colors

SlotHexSwatchConcern
accent1#FF00FF🟪 Magenta/FuchsiaNeon magenta — not used on any slide yet, but it's the first accent color auto-applied to charts/SmartArt
accent2#00FF41🟩 Neon GreenUsed on Slide 4 for the Y3 revenue figure — screams "hacker terminal," not enterprise deck

The remaining theme colors (#1A1A2E, #533483, #E94560, #0F3460, #FFC947) look intentional for a dark corporate palette, but the two neon accents clash badly.


✅ Recommended Fixes Before Rehearsal

  1. Delete all three speaker notes — they expose negotiation floor, SEC-related data discrepancy, and the parallel Pinnacle Systems conversation.
  2. Resolve/remove both comments (or address the open questions they raise).
  3. Replace Comic Sans MS and Papyrus in theme1.xml with your actual brand fonts (both the theme-level defaults and the two inline overrides on Slides 2 and 4).
  4. Swap #FF00FF (accent1) and #00FF41 (accent2) in the theme color scheme for on-brand alternatives — otherwise the first chart anyone inserts will be neon magenta.
  5. Verify the 8.3% market-share figure per the Slide 2 note — presenting a number that contradicts a pending SEC filing is a serious risk.
  6. Confirm Phase 2 timeline with engineering per Lisa Chen's comment before the demo.

Here's the full breakdown. There are several things you absolutely need to fix before rehearsal.


📄 Slide Text (all 5 slides)

Slide 1 — Title Slide

  • Strategic Partnership Proposal
  • Nexus Dynamics × Acme Corp
  • Q2 2026 — Confidential

Slide 2 — Market Opportunity

  • Global enterprise integration market valued at $42.8B (2025)
  • Projected CAGR of 23.7% through 2029
  • Top 3 verticals: Financial Services, Healthcare, Retail
  • Combined TAM for our joint solution: $6.2B (highlighted in red)
  • Nexus Dynamics currently holds 8.3% market share in middleware
  • Acme Corp API gateway adoption grew 340% YoY

Slide 3 — Proposed Integration Roadmap

  • Phase 1 (May–Jun 2026): API connector prototype and security audit
  • Phase 2 (Jul–Aug 2026): Beta launch with 5 enterprise design partners
  • Phase 3 (Sep 2026): GA release at Nexus Connect conference
  • Phase 4 (Oct–Dec 2026): Tier-2 cloud marketplace listings
  • Key dependency: Acme Corp v4.0 SDK release (targeted June 15) (highlighted in red)

Slide 4 — Financial Terms & Projections

  • Revenue Share: 18% to Acme Corp on joint deals
  • Minimum Annual Commitment: $2.4M
  • Initial Engineering Investment: $850K (split 60/40)
  • Expected Year-1 Revenue: $14.2M
  • Break-even projected at Month 9
  • 3-Year Revenue Forecast: Y1 $14.2M → Y2 $31.6M (+123%) → Y3 $58.9M (+86%) (Y3 in neon green)

Slide 5 — Next Steps

  1. Legal review of mutual NDA and partnership agreement (by Apr 18)
  2. Technical deep-dive session — Nexus + Acme engineering leads (Apr 22)
  3. Executive alignment call — confirm go/no-go (Apr 25)
  4. Joint press release draft if approved (May 1)

🚨 Hidden Speaker Notes — 3 found (VERY sensitive)

These are in the notes pane and will be visible in Presenter View. Remove or sanitize before sharing.

SlideNote
Slide 2"INTERNAL — Our market share numbers are from the 2024 analyst report. DO NOT share the updated Q1 2026 figures until legal clears the discrepancy with the SEC filing. The real number is closer to 6.1%, not 8.3%."
Slide 4"Negotiation floor: we can go as low as 12% rev share if Acme pushes back. Do NOT mention this unless they reject 18%. Also the $850K eng investment estimate doesn't include the contractor budget — actual cost is ~$1.2M."
Slide 5"Jordan said the NDA is basically done. If they ask about exclusivity, deflect — we're also talking to Pinnacle Systems but that's not public yet."

⚠️ These expose your negotiation floor, a potential SEC issue, hidden costs, and a competing parallel deal. If this deck gets screenshared or sent as a file, these notes go with it.


💬 Comments — 2 found (unresolved)

AuthorDateComment
Marcus WebbApr 10, 2:23 PM"Should we include the NDA status slide? Legal might want visibility on where that stands before the exec demo."
Lisa ChenApr 11, 9:47 AM"Need to verify these timeline dates with engineering before the demo — Phase 2 beta might slip to September if the v4.0 SDK is delayed."

These are unresolved review comments. Resolve/delete them before sending externally.


🎨 Theme Fonts & Colors — Multiple problems

Fonts (off-brand)

The theme file (theme1.xml) defines:

RoleFont set in themeVerdict
Major (headings)Comic Sans MS❌ Completely unprofessional for a partner deck
Minor (body)Papyrus❌ Equally off-brand

These theme fonts are also hard-coded as overrides on specific text runs:

  • Slide 2 title ("Market Opportunity") — explicitly set to Comic Sans MS
  • Slide 4 "3-Year Revenue Forecast" sub-header — explicitly set to Papyrus

Colors (suspicious accents in theme)

The theme color scheme "Nexus Custom" includes two garish accent colors that look like they were left over from testing:

SlotHexSwatchIssue
accent1#FF00FF🟣 Magenta/fuchsiaNeon — almost certainly not on-brand
accent2#00FF41🟢 Neon greenMatrix-green — used on Slide 4 Y3 figure

The remaining palette (#1A1A2E, #533483, #E94560, #0F3460, #FFC947) looks intentional and cohesive. The two neon colors are the outliers.


✅ Action items before rehearsal

  1. Delete all 3 speaker notes — they contain confidential negotiation strategy and a reference to an SEC filing discrepancy.
  2. Resolve/remove both comments (Marcus Webb's and Lisa Chen's).
  3. Replace theme fonts — swap Comic Sans MS and Papyrus for your actual brand fonts (in the theme and the two slide-level overrides on Slides 2 and 4).
  4. Fix the two neon accent colors — replace #FF00FF (accent1) and #00FF41 (accent2) in the theme, and fix the Slide 4 Y3 line that uses #00FF41 inline.
  5. Verify Lisa Chen's flag — confirm Phase 2 dates with engineering, since the v4.0 SDK dependency could shift the timeline.
Claude Sonnet 4.6

External Tools

ToolType
python3binary
nodebinary

Permissions

ScopeDescription
filesystem:read
filesystem:write
process:spawn

SKILL.md

PPTX creation, editing, and analysis

Overview

A user may ask you to create, edit, or analyze the contents of a .pptx file. A .pptx file is essentially a ZIP archive containing XML files and other resources that you can read or edit. You have different tools and workflows available for different tasks.

Reading and analyzing content

Text extraction

If you just need to read the text contents of a presentation, you should convert the document to markdown:

# Convert document to markdown
python -m markitdown path-to-file.pptx

Raw XML access

You need raw XML access for: comments, speaker notes, slide layouts, animations, design elements, and complex formatting. For any of these features, you'll need to unpack a presentation and read its raw XML contents.

Unpacking a file

python ooxml/scripts/unpack.py <office_file> <output_dir>

Note: The unpack.py script is located at skills/pptx/ooxml/scripts/unpack.py relative to the project root. If the script doesn't exist at this path, use find . -name "unpack.py" to locate it.

Key file structures

  • ppt/presentation.xml - Main presentation metadata and slide references
  • ppt/slides/slide{N}.xml - Individual slide contents (slide1.xml, slide2.xml, etc.)
  • ppt/notesSlides/notesSlide{N}.xml - Speaker notes for each slide
  • ppt/comments/modernComment_*.xml - Comments for specific slides
  • ppt/slideLayouts/ - Layout templates for slides
  • ppt/slideMasters/ - Master slide templates
  • ppt/theme/ - Theme and styling information
  • ppt/media/ - Images and other media files

Typography and color extraction

When given an example design to emulate: Always analyze the presentation's typography and colors first using the methods below:

  1. Read theme file: Check ppt/theme/theme1.xml for colors (<a:clrScheme>) and fonts (<a:fontScheme>)
  2. Sample slide content: Examine ppt/slides/slide1.xml for actual font usage (<a:rPr>) and colors
  3. Search for patterns: Use grep to find color (<a:solidFill>, <a:srgbClr>) and font references across all XML files

Creating a new PowerPoint presentation without a template

When creating a new PowerPoint presentation from scratch, use the html2pptx workflow to convert HTML slides to PowerPoint with accurate positioning.

Design Principles

CRITICAL: Before creating any presentation, analyze the content and choose appropriate design elements:

  1. Consider the subject matter: What is this presentation about? What tone, industry, or mood does it suggest?
  2. Check for branding: If the user mentions a company/organization, consider their brand colors and identity
  3. Match palette to content: Select colors that reflect the subject
  4. State your approach: Explain your design choices before writing code

Requirements:

  • ✅ State your content-informed design approach BEFORE writing code
  • ✅ Use web-safe fonts only: Arial, Helvetica, Times New Roman, Georgia, Courier New, Verdana, Tahoma, Trebuchet MS, Impact
  • ✅ Create clear visual hierarchy through size, weight, and color
  • ✅ Ensure readability: strong contrast, appropriately sized text, clean alignment
  • ✅ Be consistent: repeat patterns, spacing, and visual language across slides

Color Palette Selection

Choosing colors creatively:

  • Think beyond defaults: What colors genuinely match this specific topic? Avoid autopilot choices.
  • Consider multiple angles: Topic, industry, mood, energy level, target audience, brand identity (if mentioned)
  • Be adventurous: Try unexpected combinations - a healthcare presentation doesn't have to be green, finance doesn't have to be navy
  • Build your palette: Pick 3-5 colors that work together (dominant colors + supporting tones + accent)
  • Ensure contrast: Text must be clearly readable on backgrounds

Example color palettes (use these to spark creativity - choose one, adapt it, or create your own):

  1. Classic Blue: Deep navy (#1C2833), slate gray (#2E4053), silver (#AAB7B8), off-white (#F4F6F6)
  2. Teal & Coral: Teal (#5EA8A7), deep teal (#277884), coral (#FE4447), white (#FFFFFF)
  3. Bold Red: Red (#C0392B), bright red (#E74C3C), orange (#F39C12), yellow (#F1C40F), green (#2ECC71)
  4. Warm Blush: Mauve (#A49393), blush (#EED6D3), rose (#E8B4B8), cream (#FAF7F2)
  5. Burgundy Luxury: Burgundy (#5D1D2E), crimson (#951233), rust (#C15937), gold (#997929)
  6. Deep Purple & Emerald: Purple (#B165FB), dark blue (#181B24), emerald (#40695B), white (#FFFFFF)
  7. Cream & Forest Green: Cream (#FFE1C7), forest green (#40695B), white (#FCFCFC)
  8. Pink & Purple: Pink (#F8275B), coral (#FF574A), rose (#FF737D), purple (#3D2F68)
  9. Lime & Plum: Lime (#C5DE82), plum (#7C3A5F), coral (#FD8C6E), blue-gray (#98ACB5)
  10. Black & Gold: Gold (#BF9A4A), black (#000000), cream (#F4F6F6)
  11. Sage & Terracotta: Sage (#87A96B), terracotta (#E07A5F), cream (#F4F1DE), charcoal (#2C2C2C)
  12. Charcoal & Red: Charcoal (#292929), red (#E33737), light gray (#CCCBCB)
  13. Vibrant Orange: Orange (#F96D00), light gray (#F2F2F2), charcoal (#222831)
  14. Forest Green: Black (#191A19), green (#4E9F3D), dark green (#1E5128), white (#FFFFFF)
  15. Retro Rainbow: Purple (#722880), pink (#D72D51), orange (#EB5C18), amber (#F08800), gold (#DEB600)
  16. Vintage Earthy: Mustard (#E3B448), sage (#CBD18F), forest green (#3A6B35), cream (#F4F1DE)
  17. Coastal Rose: Old rose (#AD7670), beaver (#B49886), eggshell (#F3ECDC), ash gray (#BFD5BE)
  18. Orange & Turquoise: Light orange (#FC993E), grayish turquoise (#667C6F), white (#FCFCFC)

Visual Details Options

Geometric Patterns:

  • Diagonal section dividers instead of horizontal
  • Asymmetric column widths (30/70, 40/60, 25/75)
  • Rotated text headers at 90° or 270°
  • Circular/hexagonal frames for images
  • Triangular accent shapes in corners
  • Overlapping shapes for depth

Border & Frame Treatments:

  • Thick single-color borders (10-20pt) on one side only
  • Double-line borders with contrasting colors
  • Corner brackets instead of full frames
  • L-shaped borders (top+left or bottom+right)
  • Underline accents beneath headers (3-5pt thick)

Typography Treatments:

  • Extreme size contrast (72pt headlines vs 11pt body)
  • All-caps headers with wide letter spacing
  • Numbered sections in oversized display type
  • Monospace (Courier New) for data/stats/technical content
  • Condensed fonts (Arial Narrow) for dense information
  • Outlined text for emphasis

Chart & Data Styling:

  • Monochrome charts with single accent color for key data
  • Horizontal bar charts instead of vertical
  • Dot plots instead of bar charts
  • Minimal gridlines or none at all
  • Data labels directly on elements (no legends)
  • Oversized numbers for key metrics

Layout Innovations:

  • Full-bleed images with text overlays
  • Sidebar column (20-30% width) for navigation/context
  • Modular grid systems (3×3, 4×4 blocks)
  • Z-pattern or F-pattern content flow
  • Floating text boxes over colored shapes
  • Magazine-style multi-column layouts

Background Treatments:

  • Solid color blocks occupying 40-60% of slide
  • Gradient fills (vertical or diagonal only)
  • Split backgrounds (two colors, diagonal or vertical)
  • Edge-to-edge color bands
  • Negative space as a design element

Layout Tips

When creating slides with charts or tables:

  • Two-column layout (PREFERRED): Use a header spanning the full width, then two columns below - text/bullets in one column and the featured content in the other. This provides better balance and makes charts/tables more readable. Use flexbox with unequal column widths (e.g., 40%/60% split) to optimize space for each content type.
  • Full-slide layout: Let the featured content (chart/table) take up the entire slide for maximum impact and readability
  • NEVER vertically stack: Do not place charts/tables below text in a single column - this causes poor readability and layout issues

Workflow

  1. MANDATORY - READ ENTIRE FILE: Read html2pptx.md completely from start to finish. NEVER set any range limits when reading this file. Read the full file content for detailed syntax, critical formatting rules, and best practices before proceeding with presentation creation.
  2. Create an HTML file for each slide with proper dimensions (e.g., 720pt × 405pt for 16:9)
    • Use <p>, <h1>-<h6>, <ul>, <ol> for all text content
    • Use class="placeholder" for areas where charts/tables will be added (render with gray background for visibility)
    • CRITICAL: Rasterize gradients and icons as PNG images FIRST using Sharp, then reference in HTML
    • LAYOUT: For slides with charts/tables/images, use either full-slide layout or two-column layout for better readability
  3. Create and run a JavaScript file using the html2pptx.js library to convert HTML slides to PowerPoint and save the presentation
    • Use the html2pptx() function to process each HTML file
    • Add charts and tables to placeholder areas using PptxGenJS API
    • Save the presentation using pptx.writeFile()
  4. Visual validation: Generate thumbnails and inspect for layout issues
    • Create thumbnail grid: python scripts/thumbnail.py output.pptx workspace/thumbnails --cols 4
    • Read and carefully examine the thumbnail image for:
      • Text cutoff: Text being cut off by header bars, shapes, or slide edges
      • Text overlap: Text overlapping with other text or shapes
      • Positioning issues: Content too close to slide boundaries or other elements
      • Contrast issues: Insufficient contrast between text and backgrounds
    • If issues found, adjust HTML margins/spacing/colors and regenerate the presentation
    • Repeat until all slides are visually correct

Editing an existing PowerPoint presentation

When edit slides in an existing PowerPoint presentation, you need to work with the raw Office Open XML (OOXML) format. This involves unpacking the .pptx file, editing the XML content, and repacking it.

Workflow

  1. MANDATORY - READ ENTIRE FILE: Read ooxml.md (~500 lines) completely from start to finish. NEVER set any range limits when reading this file. Read the full file content for detailed guidance on OOXML structure and editing workflows before any presentation editing.
  2. Unpack the presentation: python ooxml/scripts/unpack.py <office_file> <output_dir>
  3. Edit the XML files (primarily ppt/slides/slide{N}.xml and related files)
  4. CRITICAL: Validate immediately after each edit and fix any validation errors before proceeding: python ooxml/scripts/validate.py <dir> --original <file>
  5. Pack the final presentation: python ooxml/scripts/pack.py <input_directory> <office_file>

Creating a new PowerPoint presentation using a template

When you need to create a presentation that follows an existing template's design, you'll need to duplicate and re-arrange template slides before then replacing placeholder context.

Workflow

  1. Extract template text AND create visual thumbnail grid:

    • Extract text: python -m markitdown template.pptx > template-content.md
    • Read template-content.md: Read the entire file to understand the contents of the template presentation. NEVER set any range limits when reading this file.
    • Create thumbnail grids: python scripts/thumbnail.py template.pptx
    • See Creating Thumbnail Grids section for more details
  2. Analyze template and save inventory to a file:

    • Visual Analysis: Review thumbnail grid(s) to understand slide layouts, design patterns, and visual structure
    • Create and save a template inventory file at template-inventory.md containing:
      # Template Inventory Analysis
      **Total Slides: [count]**
      **IMPORTANT: Slides are 0-indexed (first slide = 0, last slide = count-1)**
      
      ## [Category Name]
      - Slide 0: [Layout code if available] - Description/purpose
      - Slide 1: [Layout code] - Description/purpose
      - Slide 2: [Layout code] - Description/purpose
      [... EVERY slide must be listed individually with its index ...]
      
    • Using the thumbnail grid: Reference the visual thumbnails to identify:
      • Layout patterns (title slides, content layouts, section dividers)
      • Image placeholder locations and counts
      • Design consistency across slide groups
      • Visual hierarchy and structure
    • This inventory file is REQUIRED for selecting appropriate templates in the next step
  3. Create presentation outline based on template inventory:

    • Review available templates from step 2.
    • Choose an intro or title template for the first slide. This should be one of the first templates.
    • Choose safe, text-based layouts for the other slides.
    • CRITICAL: Match layout structure to actual content:
      • Single-column layouts: Use for unified narrative or single topic
      • Two-column layouts: Use ONLY when you have exactly 2 distinct items/concepts
      • Three-column layouts: Use ONLY when you have exactly 3 distinct items/concepts
      • Image + text layouts: Use ONLY when you have actual images to insert
      • Quote layouts: Use ONLY for actual quotes from people (with attribution), never for emphasis
      • Never use layouts with more placeholders than you have content
      • If you have 2 items, don't force them into a 3-column layout
      • If you have 4+ items, consider breaking into multiple slides or using a list format
    • Count your actual content pieces BEFORE selecting the layout
    • Verify each placeholder in the chosen layout will be filled with meaningful content
    • Select one option representing the best layout for each content section.
    • Save outline.md with content AND template mapping that leverages available designs
    • Example template mapping:
      # Template slides to use (0-based indexing)
      # WARNING: Verify indices are within range! Template with 73 slides has indices 0-72
      # Mapping: slide numbers from outline -> template slide indices
      template_mapping = [
          0,   # Use slide 0 (Title/Cover)
          34,  # Use slide 34 (B1: Title and body)
          34,  # Use slide 34 again (duplicate for second B1)
          50,  # Use slide 50 (E1: Quote)
          54,  # Use slide 54 (F2: Closing + Text)
      ]
      
  4. Duplicate, reorder, and delete slides using rearrange.py:

    • Use the scripts/rearrange.py script to create a new presentation with slides in the desired order:
      python scripts/rearrange.py template.pptx working.pptx 0,34,34,50,52
      
    • The script handles duplicating repeated slides, deleting unused slides, and reordering automatically
    • Slide indices are 0-based (first slide is 0, second is 1, etc.)
    • The same slide index can appear multiple times to duplicate that slide
  5. Extract ALL text using the inventory.py script:

    • Run inventory extraction:

      python scripts/inventory.py working.pptx text-inventory.json
      
    • Read text-inventory.json: Read the entire text-inventory.json file to understand all shapes and their properties. NEVER set any range limits when reading this file.

    • The inventory JSON structure:

        {
          "slide-0": {
            "shape-0": {
              "placeholder_type": "TITLE",  // or null for non-placeholders
              "left": 1.5,                  // position in inches
              "top": 2.0,
              "width": 7.5,
              "height": 1.2,
              "paragraphs": [
                {
                  "text": "Paragraph text",
                  // Optional properties (only included when non-default):
                  "bullet": true,           // explicit bullet detected
                  "level": 0,               // only included when bullet is true
                  "alignment": "CENTER",    // CENTER, RIGHT (not LEFT)
                  "space_before": 10.0,     // space before paragraph in points
                  "space_after": 6.0,       // space after paragraph in points
                  "line_spacing": 22.4,     // line spacing in points
                  "font_name": "Arial",     // from first run
                  "font_size": 14.0,        // in points
                  "bold": true,
                  "italic": false,
                  "underline": false,
                  "color": "FF0000"         // RGB color
                }
              ]
            }
          }
        }
      
    • Key features:

      • Slides: Named as "slide-0", "slide-1", etc.
      • Shapes: Ordered by visual position (top-to-bottom, left-to-right) as "shape-0", "shape-1", etc.
      • Placeholder types: TITLE, CENTER_TITLE, SUBTITLE, BODY, OBJECT, or null
      • Default font size: default_font_size in points extracted from layout placeholders (when available)
      • Slide numbers are filtered: Shapes with SLIDE_NUMBER placeholder type are automatically excluded from inventory
      • Bullets: When bullet: true, level is always included (even if 0)
      • Spacing: space_before, space_after, and line_spacing in points (only included when set)
      • Colors: color for RGB (e.g., "FF0000"), theme_color for theme colors (e.g., "DARK_1")
      • Properties: Only non-default values are included in the output
  6. Generate replacement text and save the data to a JSON file Based on the text inventory from the previous step:

    • CRITICAL: First verify which shapes exist in the inventory - only reference shapes that are actually present
    • VALIDATION: The replace.py script will validate that all shapes in your replacement JSON exist in the inventory
      • If you reference a non-existent shape, you'll get an error showing available shapes
      • If you reference a non-existent slide, you'll get an error indicating the slide doesn't exist
      • All validation errors are shown at once before the script exits
    • IMPORTANT: The replace.py script uses inventory.py internally to identify ALL text shapes
    • AUTOMATIC CLEARING: ALL text shapes from the inventory will be cleared unless you provide "paragraphs" for them
    • Add a "paragraphs" field to shapes that need content (not "replacement_paragraphs")
    • Shapes without "paragraphs" in the replacement JSON will have their text cleared automatically
    • Paragraphs with bullets will be automatically left aligned. Don't set the alignment property on when "bullet": true
    • Generate appropriate replacement content for placeholder text
    • Use shape size to determine appropriate content length
    • CRITICAL: Include paragraph properties from the original inventory - don't just provide text
    • IMPORTANT: When bullet: true, do NOT include bullet symbols (•, -, *) in text - they're added automatically
    • ESSENTIAL FORMATTING RULES:
      • Headers/titles should typically have "bold": true
      • List items should have "bullet": true, "level": 0 (level is required when bullet is true)
      • Preserve any alignment properties (e.g., "alignment": "CENTER" for centered text)
      • Include font properties when different from default (e.g., "font_size": 14.0, "font_name": "Lora")
      • Colors: Use "color": "FF0000" for RGB or "theme_color": "DARK_1" for theme colors
      • The replacement script expects properly formatted paragraphs, not just text strings
      • Overlapping shapes: Prefer shapes with larger default_font_size or more appropriate placeholder_type
    • Save the updated inventory with replacements to replacement-text.json
    • WARNING: Different template layouts have different shape counts - always check the actual inventory before creating replacements

    Example paragraphs field showing proper formatting:

    "paragraphs": [
      {
        "text": "New presentation title text",
        "alignment": "CENTER",
        "bold": true
      },
      {
        "text": "Section Header",
        "bold": true
      },
      {
        "text": "First bullet point without bullet symbol",
        "bullet": true,
        "level": 0
      },
      {
        "text": "Red colored text",
        "color": "FF0000"
      },
      {
        "text": "Theme colored text",
        "theme_color": "DARK_1"
      },
      {
        "text": "Regular paragraph text without special formatting"
      }
    ]
    

    Shapes not listed in the replacement JSON are automatically cleared:

    {
      "slide-0": {
        "shape-0": {
          "paragraphs": [...] // This shape gets new text
        }
        // shape-1 and shape-2 from inventory will be cleared automatically
      }
    }
    

    Common formatting patterns for presentations:

    • Title slides: Bold text, sometimes centered
    • Section headers within slides: Bold text
    • Bullet lists: Each item needs "bullet": true, "level": 0
    • Body text: Usually no special properties needed
    • Quotes: May have special alignment or font properties
  7. Apply replacements using the replace.py script

    python scripts/replace.py working.pptx replacement-text.json output.pptx
    

    The script will:

    • First extract the inventory of ALL text shapes using functions from inventory.py
    • Validate that all shapes in the replacement JSON exist in the inventory
    • Clear text from ALL shapes identified in the inventory
    • Apply new text only to shapes with "paragraphs" defined in the replacement JSON
    • Preserve formatting by applying paragraph properties from the JSON
    • Handle bullets, alignment, font properties, and colors automatically
    • Save the updated presentation

    Example validation errors:

    ERROR: Invalid shapes in replacement JSON:
      - Shape 'shape-99' not found on 'slide-0'. Available shapes: shape-0, shape-1, shape-4
      - Slide 'slide-999' not found in inventory
    
    ERROR: Replacement text made overflow worse in these shapes:
      - slide-0/shape-2: overflow worsened by 1.25" (was 0.00", now 1.25")
    

Creating Thumbnail Grids

To create visual thumbnail grids of PowerPoint slides for quick analysis and reference:

python scripts/thumbnail.py template.pptx [output_prefix]

Features:

  • Creates: thumbnails.jpg (or thumbnails-1.jpg, thumbnails-2.jpg, etc. for large decks)
  • Default: 5 columns, max 30 slides per grid (5×6)
  • Custom prefix: python scripts/thumbnail.py template.pptx my-grid
    • Note: The output prefix should include the path if you want output in a specific directory (e.g., workspace/my-grid)
  • Adjust columns: --cols 4 (range: 3-6, affects slides per grid)
  • Grid limits: 3 cols = 12 slides/grid, 4 cols = 20, 5 cols = 30, 6 cols = 42
  • Slides are zero-indexed (Slide 0, Slide 1, etc.)

Use cases:

  • Template analysis: Quickly understand slide layouts and design patterns
  • Content review: Visual overview of entire presentation
  • Navigation reference: Find specific slides by their visual appearance
  • Quality check: Verify all slides are properly formatted

Examples:

# Basic usage
python scripts/thumbnail.py presentation.pptx

# Combine options: custom name, columns
python scripts/thumbnail.py template.pptx analysis --cols 4

Converting Slides to Images

To visually analyze PowerPoint slides, convert them to images using a two-step process:

  1. Convert PPTX to PDF:

    soffice --headless --convert-to pdf template.pptx
    
  2. Convert PDF pages to JPEG images:

    pdftoppm -jpeg -r 150 template.pdf slide
    

    This creates files like slide-1.jpg, slide-2.jpg, etc.

Options:

  • -r 150: Sets resolution to 150 DPI (adjust for quality/size balance)
  • -jpeg: Output JPEG format (use -png for PNG if preferred)
  • -f N: First page to convert (e.g., -f 2 starts from page 2)
  • -l N: Last page to convert (e.g., -l 5 stops at page 5)
  • slide: Prefix for output files

Example for specific range:

pdftoppm -jpeg -r 150 -f 2 -l 5 template.pdf slide  # Converts only pages 2-5

Code Style Guidelines

IMPORTANT: When generating code for PPTX operations:

  • Write concise code
  • Avoid verbose variable names and redundant operations
  • Avoid unnecessary print statements

Dependencies

Required dependencies (should already be installed):

  • markitdown: pip install "markitdown[pptx]" (for text extraction from presentations)
  • pptxgenjs: npm install -g pptxgenjs (for creating presentations via html2pptx)
  • playwright: npm install -g playwright (for HTML rendering in html2pptx)
  • react-icons: npm install -g react-icons react react-dom (for icons)
  • sharp: npm install -g sharp (for SVG rasterization and image processing)
  • LibreOffice: sudo apt-get install libreoffice (for PDF conversion)
  • Poppler: sudo apt-get install poppler-utils (for pdftoppm to convert PDF to images)
  • defusedxml: pip install defusedxml (for secure XML parsing)

When to Use

This skill is applicable to execute the workflow or actions described in the overview.

FAQ

What does pptx-official do?

A user may ask you to create, edit, or analyze the contents of a .pptx file. A .pptx file is essentially a ZIP archive containing XML files and other resources that you can read or edit. You have different tools and workflows available for different tasks.

When should I use pptx-official?

Use it when you need a repeatable workflow that produces downloadable file.

What does pptx-official output?

In the evaluated run it produced downloadable file.

How do I install or invoke pptx-official?

Ask the agent to use this skill when the task matches its documented workflow.

Which agents does pptx-official support?

Agent support is inferred from the source, but not explicitly declared.

What tools, channels, or permissions does pptx-official need?

It uses python3, node; channels commonly include file; permissions include filesystem:read, filesystem:write, process:spawn.

Is pptx-official safe to install?

Static analysis marked this skill as medium risk; review side effects and permissions before enabling it.

How is pptx-official different from an MCP or plugin?

A skill packages instructions and workflow conventions; tools, MCP servers, and plugins are dependencies the skill may call during execution.

Does pptx-official outperform not using a skill?

About pptx-official

When to use pptx-official

You need to generate a new PowerPoint deck programmatically from HTML-based slide layouts. You need to inspect or modify raw PPTX XML for notes, comments, themes, layouts, or formatting. You need to extract presentation text or validate rendered slide layouts with thumbnails.

When pptx-official is not the right choice

You only need generic writing advice or presentation strategy without producing or editing a .pptx file. You need live integration with cloud presentation platforms rather than local PPTX file manipulation.

What it produces

Produces downloadable file.