https://bz.apache.org/ooo/show_bug.cgi?id=125568
Stefan Papusoi <[email protected]> changed: What |Removed |Added ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- CC| |[email protected] --- Comment #4 from Stefan Papusoi <[email protected]> --- I successfully reproduced the bug using the stable version available on the download web page: Apache Open Office 4.1.1, AOO411m6(Build:9775) - Rev. 1617669 on a Windows 7 x64 OS After that I took the latest nightly build available at this time - version Apache Open Office 4.2.0 , AOO420m1(Build:9800) - Rev. 1665722 . I could reproduce the issue in this version too. For replicating the issue I used the following steps: Download the attached .pptx file from this issue to the local disc. Open the attached .pptx file with OO Impress. Open the attached .pptx file also with Google Presentation viewer or LibreOffice Impress or Microsoft PowerPoint 2013. In Google Presentation viewer and LibreOffice Impress and MS PowerPoint, part of the text existing in the slides is coloured(two types of red nuances). In OO Impress text is all black (except images which keep their colour). There’s little documentation on how much support there is for .pptx The thing that was obvious is that it might have been supported to a certain level in the past as it was written in the release notes for version 3.0: https://www.openoffice.org/dev_docs/features/3.0/ I then took the version 3.4.1 of Apache Open Office available on the official download web page and tried to reproduce the issue. The colours of the text were kept. So the change happened somewhere in between versions 3.4.1 and 4.1.1 as far as I can tell. Microsoft Powerpoint presentation saves files in this .pptx format since their 2007 version of Office. These file type is still widely used. Besides Microsoft Office there is Google Presentation and another free open source version of Office - Libre Office Impress which support displaying coloured text of .pptx presentation. -- You are receiving this mail because: You are the assignee for the issue.
