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research notebacklog referencescore 30
PPTX creation, editing, and analysis
A user may ask you to create, edit, or analyze the contents of a .pptx file. A .pptx file is essentially a ZIP archive containing XML files and other resources that you can read or edit. You have different tools and workflows available for different tasks.
Full HTML reader
Read the full artifact
Extracted abstract or opening context
--- name: pptx description: "Presentation creation, editing, and analysis. When Claude needs to work with presentations (.pptx files) for: (1) Creating new presentations, (2) Modifying or editing content, (3) Working with layouts, (4) Adding comments or speaker notes, or any other presentation tasks" license: Proprietary. LICENSE.txt has complete terms ---
A user may ask you to create, edit, or analyze the contents of a .pptx file. A .pptx file is essentially a ZIP archive containing XML files and other resources that you can read or edit. You have different tools and workflows available for different tasks.
### Text extraction If you just need to read the text contents of a presentation, you should convert the document to markdown:
### Raw XML access You need raw XML access for: comments, speaker notes, slide layouts, animations, design elements, and complex formatting. For any of these features, you'll need to unpack a presentation and read its raw XML contents.
#### Unpacking a file `python ooxml/scripts/unpack.py <office_file> <output_dir>`
Promotion decision
What has to happen next
Keep in the searchable backlog until it intersects a live paper or system.
Why this is not always a full paper yet
Corpus pages are public-safe readers for discovered workspace artifacts. They are not automatically final papers. A corpus item becomes a polished paper only after the editable source, evidence checkpoints, references, figures, render path, and release status are attached through the paper schema.