On Wednesday June 13, 2012 1:27 pm avamk wrote: > Hello, > > My group is in the process of setting up a slideshow template, and > unfortunately for practical reasons need to save it as a PowerPoint > template. > > My question is twofold: > > (1) What are some of your experiences in opening and using PowerPoint > templates in LibreOffice? I prefer saving in the template in a format that I > can reasonably expect good support for in LibreOffice.
Templates created in PowerPoint, regardless of the file format, often have issues in LibreOffice. The most common issues I have encountered are elements that are misplaced on the slide and font effects that do not transfer to LibreOffice from PowerPoint. But the most faithful reproduction seems to occur when using ppt files, regardless of whether they were created from a pot or a potx. pptx files are not as well-supported under LibreOffice as .ppt files are. But that's just my experience using a couple of templates I created in PowerPoint 2010. > (2) We prefer a format that is as future proof as possible (in terms of > consistent look and format using it between different software, Micro$oft or > otherwise). With that in mind, which of the following would be a better > choice? Microsoft PowerPoint 97/Xp/2000/2003 Template (*.pot), Microsoft > PowerPoint 2007/2010 XML Template (*.potx), or Office Open XML Presentation > Template (*.potm; *.potx)? That's a difficult question to give a blanket answer for. It will depend on what features you include in your template. You will need to ensure that the fonts you use are available on all systems where the templates will be used, for instance. Your templates will need to be tested on all the software where it will be used to ensure that formatting is consistent. This could be an ongoing process. One thing you might consider is whether you need the presentation in any of those formats. PowerPoint and Libreoffice can export presentations to PDF, which can be presented with some limited transition effects in many PDF viewers. Not many viewers offer a presentation mode with suitable features, though. Okular seems to have the best presentation mode among the PDF viewers I have tested, and there is a Windows version of that available from kde.org. > Our work environment consists mainly of computers running Micro$oft > PowerPoint 2010, a couple with PowerPoint 2007, and only one with > LibreOffice 3.5. (Unfortunately switching all to LibreOffice is not > practical for numerous reasons that I wish weren't true, but beyond the > scope of this email.) You will have far fewer headaches by obtaining an Office license for the one machine that doesn't have it than to try to make all presentation programs happy with whatever format is the least common denominator, unfortunately. -- Scott -- For unsubscribe instructions e-mail to: [email protected] Problems? http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/ Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/global/users/ All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted
