productivity-skill beginner active

Powerpoint Pptx

Building a slide deck from a bullet outline takes an hour before content even begins. Recurring status decks waste the same hour every week. The openclaw powerpoint skill generates .pptx files from an outline.

What breaks without openclaw powerpoint skill

Manual slide deck assembly. Recurring presentation work eating update time. Formatting blocking content progress.

Multi-slide presentations from a text outline × python-pptx-backed generator ÷ 5–10 minutes ÷ no PowerPoint required = decks ready to open in one command.

openclaw powerpoint skill — what it actually does

01
Creates structured PowerPoint decks from natural language slide outlines.
02
Automates recurring status decks built from the latest data exports.
03
Produces .pptx files using built-in themes ready for manual polish.
04
Requires python-pptx dependency installed before first run.

Security check — openclaw powerpoint skill

Privacy score: 7/10 — accesses connected platform APIs only. Lock it: review OAuth scopes before install, confirm macOS, Linux; OpenClaw ≥1.0; python-pptx compatibility.

Quick start — openclaw powerpoint skill in 5–10 minutes

Setup time: 5–10 minutes

!
You need:
  • OpenClaw core
  • python-pptx

Install the package:

# Install via ClawhHub
clawhub install ivangdavila/powerpoint-pptx
1
Install dependency: pip install python-pptx
2
Install the skill
3
Provide a slide outline or topic
4
Receive a .pptx file in the current directory

Troubleshooting openclaw powerpoint skill

1
1. Custom slide masters not supported — uses built-in themes only
2
2. Animated transitions require manual addition in PowerPoint after generation

Compatibility & status

Works with: macOS, Linux; OpenClaw ≥1.0; python-pptx beginner Last updated: Nov 2025 ★ 165 on GitHub MIT

Official docs →

View on GitHub →

Related — more like openclaw powerpoint skill

More by ivangdavila

Keep rebuilding the same weekly status deck from scratch. Install the PowerPoint skill and generate the next one in seconds.

Get it on GitHub →