Supercharge your PowerPoint productivity with

Supercharge your PPT Productivity with PPTools - Click here to learn more.

Tell me about PPTools

Put your PowerPoint-generated HTML on the web


PPTools
Shape Styles brings the power of styles to PowerPoint. Apply complex formatting with a single click
Merge Excel, CSV or tab-delimited data into PowerPoint presentations to create certificates, awards presentations, personalized presentations and more
FixLinks prevents broken links when you distribute PowerPoint presentations
Optimizer saves disk space and bandwidth, shrinks your PowerPoint presentations to the right size for email, screenshow or printing
PPT2HTML gives you full control of PowerPoint HTML output, helps meet Section 508 accessibility requirements
Prep4PDF preserves interactivity in PowerPoint presentations when you convert to PDF
Image Export converts PowerPoint slides to JPG, PNG, GIF, WMF and more

When you save your presentation as Web Page from versions of PowerPoint later than 97, you're asked to choose a folder and filename to save to. It's generally best to avoid spaces, oddball punctuation or excessively long names when you choose a name.

Suppose you choose to save to a file called MyShow.htm in C:\MyDocuments.

PowerPoint creates a file in C:\MyDocuments called MyShow.htm
It also creates a folder in C:\MyDocuments called MyShow_files, and in that folder, it puts the additional image, html and other support files needed to display your presentation.

So now you have:

C:\MyDocuments\MyShow.htm and
C:\MyDocuments\MyShow_files\*.* (support files)

You doubleclick MyShow.htm to preview the presentation, it looks great, now you want to put it up on your web site for the world to see.

Suppose you want the presentation in a folder on the web server that corresponds to http://www.mydomain.com/Shows/

  • Upload MyShow.htm to the folder Shows
  • Create a new folder in Shows called MyShow_files
  • Upload all the files from the MyShow_files folder on your hard drive to the MyShow_files folder inside Shows on your web server
  • Link or send visitors to http://www.mydomain.com/Shows/MyShow.htm

Notes:

  • Make absolutely certain that your FTP program is set to upload files as Binary, not ASCII. Some programs will offer to autodetect the file type and switch back and forth as needed. Fooey. ASCII uploads are guaranteed to corrupt binary files, but I've never had a Binary upload corrupt any file of any type. Set it to Binary and forget it, sez I.
  • File names. Watch it! To a unix/linux server ThisFile.htm, Thisfile.htm and thisfile.htm are all different files. If your operating system, your FTP program or your happy fingers accidentally change the capitalization of file or folder names, your links will break and/or graphics will disappear.
  • Many FTP programs can upload whole folders full of files and even create the folder for you on the server. If yours can, by all means let it!
  • When you post PowerPoint's own HTML to your site, anyone who can view your web site can also use PowerPoint's File, Open command and type in your presentation's URL to open your presentation directly into their copy of PowerPoint, just as though you'd posted the PPT or PPS file on your site. If you want to limit this ability, delete the files OLEDATA.MSO and PRES.XML from the folder full of supporting files that PPT created before upoading it to your site.

On the whole, we're not happy about the lack of control PPT allows us. So we wrote a much more flexible way of doing the job. It's an addin called PPT2HTML. Visit for more information and a free fully functional demo.


Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape Contents © 1995-2008 Stephen Rindsberg, Rindsberg Photography, Inc. and members of the MS PowerPoint MVP team. You may link to this page but any form of unauthorized reproduction of this page's contents is expressly forbidden.

Español    Deutsch    Français    Português    Italiano    Nederlands    Greek    Japanese    Korean    Chinese



Supercharge your PPT Productivity with PPTools


content authoring & site maintenance by
Friday, the automatic faq maker (logo)
Friday - The Automatic FAQ Maker

Put your PowerPoint-generated HTML on the web
http://www.pptfaq.com/FAQ00241.htm
Last update 23 April, 2007