duplicating powerpoint slides

J

JohnM

I wish to make jpgs of individual powerpoint slides in a
presentation containing hundreds. Is there a way to do it
without making jpgs (or tifs) of the entire presentation?

Also, if I make a pdf file of the presentation, is there a
way to make a jpg copy of the individual pages in the pdf,
so that I can import them into a word document.

Also, is there a way, other than screenshot, to make a high
quality copy of the menu for the animations (or any other
pull-down menu) in a high quality copy so that I can make
an illustration in a word document.

All the above are needed so that I can make a word document
illustrating how I animated certain slides and can insert
pictures of the various steps and menus into the word
document (as is done in textbooks of the process).

Anyone who can help, thanks.
 
M

Mickey Stevens

I wish to make jpgs of individual powerpoint slides in a
presentation containing hundreds. Is there a way to do it
without making jpgs (or tifs) of the entire presentation?

Yes. Begin by going to PowerPoint -> Preferences (or Edit -> Preferences or
Tools -> Preferences). Click the "Save" tab, and then, under "Save slides
as graphic files," choose "Save curent slide only." Make any other changes
you wish, and then click OK.

To save specific slides as JPEGs, find the slide that you want to create a
JPEG of, and then go to File -> Save As. Under "Format," choose "Joint
Photographic Experts Group (JPEG)." Edit the name if you wish, and then
click the Save button to save.
Also, if I make a pdf file of the presentation, is there a
way to make a jpg copy of the individual pages in the pdf,
so that I can import them into a word document.

There might be, I'm just not aware of it.
Also, is there a way, other than screenshot, to make a high
quality copy of the menu for the animations (or any other
pull-down menu) in a high quality copy so that I can make
an illustration in a word document.

I am aware of no other method. I don't see why screenshots wouldn't be
adequate, as the PDF files that the Command-Shift-3 or Command-Shift-4
command generates are of high quality.
 

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