Save Word Documents as Power Point Documents

C

Cliff

We have almost all our hymns organused in Word and would like to convert to
Power Point so they can be projected at our church services.
What is the most efficient way to do this?
 
P

PPTMagician

Hi Cliff,

PowerPoint will automatically import Word documents structured as follows:

Slide Title
Slide Text
More Slide Text
Slide Title
Slide Text
More Slide Text

Open the Word.doc with PowerPoint and it will import the text to the slides.

Glenna
 
E

Echo S

Cliff said:
We have almost all our hymns organused in Word and would like to convert to
Power Point so they can be projected at our church services.
What is the most efficient way to do this?

I'd spend a little time in Word applying styles. PPT picks up the Word text
styles to determine where to place the text.

Word style --> PPT placement
Heading 1 --> Slide title
Heading 2 --> Primary bullet text
Heading 3 --> Secondary bullet text

etc.

IIRC, anything formatted as just "normal" style in Word doesn't transfer to
PPT when you do a File/Send to PPT from Word (or when you just do a
File/Open in PPT, select "all files" in the "as type" dropdown, and select
your Word document).
 
C

Cliff

Thanks for the advice. I'll try it out and let you know if I have any problems

Echo S said:
Cliff said:
We have almost all our hymns organused in Word and would like to convert to
Power Point so they can be projected at our church services.
What is the most efficient way to do this?

I'd spend a little time in Word applying styles. PPT picks up the Word text
styles to determine where to place the text.

Word style --> PPT placement
Heading 1 --> Slide title
Heading 2 --> Primary bullet text
Heading 3 --> Secondary bullet text

etc.

IIRC, anything formatted as just "normal" style in Word doesn't transfer to
PPT when you do a File/Send to PPT from Word (or when you just do a
File/Open in PPT, select "all files" in the "as type" dropdown, and select
your Word document).

--
Echo [MS PPT MVP]
http://www.echosvoice.com
presenter, PPT Live '04
Oct 10-13, San Diego http://www.powerpointlive.com
 
S

sstephy

Is there any way to open a Power Point document if I don't have Word or
Office? I'm using WinXP Home and MS Works. Steph
 
E

ExtraPilot

I'm interested in solutions to this issue as well. I use Office 2007.

I'm creating a series of PowerPoint 2007 presentations based on Word 2007
documents. The Word documents don't include graphics--just text. I have
formated the Word documents thus:

Heading 1 style applied to each heading that I want to define as the title
for new slide in PowerPoint.

Heading 2 style applied to each subsequent paragraph in the Word document
that I want to become text on a slide in PowerPoint.

Heading 1 style for the next slide, and so on.

I can open the Word documents (outlines, really) in PowerPoint, but, alas,
PowerPoint won't import more than about 80 slides. Many of the presentations
that I'm creating will (or should) contain between 100-150 slides after I
transfer the content from Word to PowerPoint.

I'm puzzled about this limitation in PowerPoint, especially in light of the
new XML-based Office formats. It seems to me that it should be easy to read
content from Word (in docx format) and transform that into content PowerPoint
(pptx format). Isn't such cross-application sharing of data one of main
reasons for using XML-based formats?

I also don't understand the apparent 80-slide limit when importing Word
documents into PowerPoint, especially if the Word documents contain only
text, properly styled with heading styles. Is there a way around this
limitation?

And I'd love to see a true style feature in PowerPoint; that would make
reformatting titles and text in PowerPoint so easy and fast, especially after
importing content from Word. But I guess that's for the next version...
 
E

ExtraPilot

Thanks, Steve.

I did, of course, think of splitting the document and presentation to get
around the 80-slide limit, and I can make that work., as I've done with many
earlier version of Word and PowerPoint. But I remain puzzled by the
limitation and the whole XML-format issue.

I see many blog posts and Web sites crowing about the ability to create, for
example, Word and Excel documents in code using the information about the
structures of those documents in Office 2007. I can imagine many useful
applications for that technique.

But if, for example, you can generate Word documents automagically, why
can't PowerPoint consume a docx document and render it (within reason) as a
pptx presentation? (And for purposes of this thread, that's a rhetorical
question.)

Thanks again for your quick reply.
 
I

Irene Vegas

Hi Steve, My problem is the opposite, but I can't get any answers no matter
how I ask them.
I have a Power Point 2003 presentation, and I would like to make outlines of
it in Word, but without the slides, only the words.
 
R

ron_2404

Irene Vegas said:
Hi Steve, My problem is the opposite, but I can't get any answers no matter
how I ask them.
I have a Power Point 2003 presentation, and I would like to make outlines of
it in Word, but without the slides, only the words.

This is VERY easy in 2003 (difficult in 2007 unless someone can help me). Powerpoint and Word use outlines interchangeably.
In Word use File... Send to... Powerpoint. A file created in Outline mode
creates all the slides in Powerpoint with each slide starting with Heading 1
In Powerpoint use File... Send to... Microsoft Office Word... and pick an
option (the bottom one (Outline only) creates the same outline but you may
have to remove bullets and numbering (click on the bullets icon twice) and
View... Outline... to see it
Selecting All and hitting CTRL + Space reformats the text to your normal
Outline in Word.
 

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