💡 Summary
A skill for creating, editing, and analyzing PowerPoint (.pptx) files through XML manipulation and HTML conversion workflows.
🎯 Target Audience
🤖 AI Roast: “This skill is a Swiss Army knife for PowerPoint, but reading the manual requires a PhD in XML archeology.”
Risk: Executes arbitrary Python/Node.js scripts (unpack.py, html2pptx.js) and shell commands (grep, find) on user-provided files, enabling potential code injection. Mitigation: Run in a sandboxed environment with strict input validation and no network access.
name: pptx description: "Presentation creation, editing, and analysis. When Claude needs to work with presentations (.pptx files) for: (1) Creating new presentations, (2) Modifying or editing content, (3) Working with layouts, (4) Adding comments or speaker notes, or any other presentation tasks" license: Proprietary. LICENSE.txt has complete terms
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 referencesppt/slides/slide{N}.xml- Individual slide contents (slide1.xml, slide2.xml, etc.)ppt/notesSlides/notesSlide{N}.xml- Speaker notes for each slideppt/comments/modernComment_*.xml- Comments for specific slidesppt/slideLayouts/- Layout templates for slidesppt/slideMasters/- Master slide templatesppt/theme/- Theme and styling informationppt/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:
- Read theme file: Check
ppt/theme/theme1.xmlfor colors (<a:clrScheme>) and fonts (<a:fontScheme>) - Sample slide content: Examine
ppt/slides/slide1.xmlfor actual font usage (<a:rPr>) and colors - 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:
- Consider the subject matter: What is this presentation about? What tone, industry, or mood does it suggest?
- Check for branding: If the user mentions a company/organization, consider their brand colors and identity
- Match palette to content: Select colors that reflect the subject
- 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):
- Classic Blue: Deep navy (#1C2833), slate gray (#2E4053), silver (#AAB7B8), off-white (#F4F6F6)
- Teal & Coral: Teal (#5EA8A7), deep teal (#277884), coral (#FE4447), white (#FFFFFF)
- Bold Red: Red (#C0392B), bright red (#E74C3C), orange (#F39C12), yellow (#F1C40F), green (#2ECC71)
- Warm Blush: Mauve (#A49393), blush (#EED6D3), rose (#E8B4B8), cream (#FAF7F2)
- Burgundy Luxury: Burgundy (#5D1D2E), crimson (#951233), rust (#C15937), gold (#997929)
- Deep Purple & Emerald: Purple (#B165FB), dark blue (#181B24), emerald (#40695B), white (#FFFFFF)
- Cream & Forest Green: Cream (#FFE1C7), forest green (#40695B), white (#FCFCFC)
- Pink & Purple: Pink (#F8275B), coral (#FF574A), rose (#FF737D), purple (#3D2F68)
- Lime & Plum: Lime (#C5DE82), plum (#7C3A5F), coral (#FD8C6E), blue-gray (#98ACB5)
- Black & Gold: Gold (#BF9A4A), black (#000000), cream (#F4F6F6)
- Sage & Terracotta: Sage (#87A96B), terracotta (#E07A5F), cream (#F4F1DE), charcoal (#2C2C2C)
- Charcoal & Red: Charcoal (#292929), red (#E33737), light gray (#CCCBCB)
- Vibrant Orange: Orange (#F96D00), light gray (#F2F2F2), charcoal (#222831)
- Forest Green: Black (#191A19), green (#4E9F3D), dark green (#1E5128), white (#FFFFFF)
- Retro Rainbow: Purple (#722880), pink (#D72D51), orange (#EB5C18), amber (#F08800), gold (#DEB600)
- Vintage Earthy: Mustard (#E3B448), sage (#CBD18F), forest green (#3A6B35), cream (#F4F1DE)
- Coastal Rose: Old rose (#AD7670), beaver (#B49886), eggshell (#F3ECDC), ash gray (#BFD5BE)
- 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
- MANDATORY - READ ENTIRE FILE: Read
html2pptx.mdcompletely 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. - 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
- Use
- Create and run a JavaScript file using the
html2pptx.jslibrary 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()
- Use the
- 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
- **Contr
- Create thumbnail grid:
Pros
- Enables programmatic creation and detailed analysis of presentations.
- Provides granular control over design elements via XML.
- Offers structured workflows for converting HTML to PowerPoint.
Cons
- High complexity due to reliance on raw XML and multiple tools.
- Workflow is fragmented and requires significant manual steps.
- Lacks a simple, unified API for common tasks.
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Disclaimer: This content is sourced from GitHub open source projects for display and rating purposes only.
Copyright belongs to the original author anthropics.
