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Supports: ODP
ODP is the OpenDocument Presentation format used by LibreOffice Impress and Apache OpenOffice Impress — an XML slide deck zipped into a single file. Converting it to PNG renders each slide as a standalone, lossless image you can embed in a web page, drop into documentation, or share with anyone, no presentation software required. Every slide becomes its own PNG, so a 12-slide deck returns 12 numbered images.
| Property | Value |
|---|---|
| Standard | OpenDocument Format, ISO/IEC 26300 |
| Published as ISO standard | 30 November 2006 (OASIS standard May 2005) |
| Structure | Zipped XML package (slides, styles, embedded media) |
| Created by | LibreOffice Impress, Apache OpenOffice Impress |
| Also opens in | Microsoft PowerPoint, Google Slides |
| Holds | Slides, text, images, charts, transitions, animations |
| Best for | Editable, open-standard presentations |
| Property | Value |
|---|---|
| Standard | PNG, W3C Recommendation (2nd ed. June 2025) |
| Compression | Lossless — no generation loss, no JPEG-style artifacts |
| Transparency | Yes, optional alpha channel |
| Color | Up to 16-bit per channel truecolor; indexed palettes supported |
| Text | Rendered to pixels — crisp, but not selectable or searchable |
| Native browser support | Every major browser, universally |
| Best for | Single sharp slide images, screenshots, web/embed use |
A PNG keeps slide text razor-sharp because it never re-compresses lossily, and it preserves transparent regions. The trade-off: once a slide is an image, the text is pixels, not characters — you cannot select, search, or copy it. If you need a single shareable file with selectable text and multiple pages, convert to ODP to PDF instead. Animations and slide transitions are not preserved in either case; each slide is captured as one static frame.
Yes. Each slide in the presentation is rendered as its own PNG, named in slide order. A 20-slide deck returns 20 images, which you can download as a ZIP. This matches how every standard presentation-to-image rasterizer works — there is no single combined PNG for the whole deck.
No. PNG is a raster image format, so slide text is converted to pixels. It will look crisp — PNG is lossless, so there are no compression artifacts around letters — but you cannot highlight, copy, or search it. For selectable, searchable text in one file, convert to ODP to PDF instead.
No. Animations, builds, and slide transitions are time-based effects that a static image cannot hold. Each slide is captured as a single frame showing its final on-screen state. If your deck relies on motion, a static image of any kind — PNG, JPG, or a PDF page — will flatten it.
PNG is lossless and supports transparency, so text, lines, charts, and screenshots stay sharp with no "ringing" around edges. JPG compresses smoothly but adds artifacts that show up worst on the high-contrast text and flat color fills typical of slides. If file size matters more than crispness and you don't need transparency, ODP to JPG produces smaller files.
For on-screen, web, or social use, 72 or 96 DPI keeps files small. For print handouts or anywhere the slide will be enlarged, 300 DPI keeps text and diagrams sharp. In our testing, raising the DPI mainly affects file size and rendered pixel dimensions; the visual layout of each slide is preserved at every setting.
Yes. OpenDocument is an actively maintained open standard (ISO/IEC 26300), and LibreOffice Impress uses ODP as its native presentation format. The conversion reads the standard ODP package, so files from current LibreOffice and Apache OpenOffice releases are supported.
Yes. Your file is uploaded over an encrypted connection, processed on our servers, and deleted automatically a few hours after conversion. There is no sign-up and no watermark, and files are never shared or made public. The output PNGs are plain images you can then open or share anywhere.