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Carol Carol is offline
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Default Controlling File Growth when exporting Powerpoint to Word

Hi Stuart,

Using the Send To function in PowerPoint does not bloat the file. See:
http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/as...168821033.aspx

I'm not sure which version of PowerPoint you're using but see the tip below
which applies to 2002:

On the Picture toolbar, click the Compress Pictures button. If you don't see
the Picture toolbar, point to Toolbars on the View menu, and then click
Picture.
To compress all pictures in the presentation, click All pictures in document.
Under Change resolution, select how you intend to use your presentation by
clicking either Web/Screen or Print.
To further reduce file size, select the Delete cropped areas of pictures
check box.
Click OK.

I hope this has been helfpul to you.

--
Carol A. Bratt, MCP



"stuartbell" wrote:

Carol: Thank you for your suggestions:

Try compressing the pictures.


There are 100 slides from PowerPoint - most have some graphics and text
mixed - and many were copy/pasted from a text book that is the basis
for the class. I don't know how to automatically compress the images
in PowerPoint - and manual compression of 100 pictures is difficult
since the slides evolve in parallel with the product i'm involved with
- the instructor's guide. It would be nice to use the automatic DLE
facilities that come with Word and PPT to keep the presentations in
sync.

Also, this sounds crazy, but if you put a blank slide at the beginning of your presentation, it will actually make your file smaller.


I tried this to no effect. I also tried repeatidly splitting the WORD
document in half to "search" for one or more original PowerPoint images
that may account for a high amount of the 117 meg in the word file. No
luck - the images are split about evenly.

Finally, I saved the entire WORD document as HTML and re-opened it in
WORD and resaved it as a DOC file. The 117Meg file dropped to about 8
Meg with no apparent loss of content. The intermediate HTML version
has a GIF file for each original PowerPoint slide - much much smaller
but with the same visual content.

My guess is the "Send to WORD" function in PowerPoint exports a high
density JPEG file for each slide and these files cause the 117 MEG file
in WORD.

Do you know any way to control the export format of PPT?

Thank you again. /Stu