

You may distribute it and/or modify it under the terms of either the GNU General Public License ( ), version 3 or later, or the Creative Commons Attribution License ( ), version 4.0 or later.Īll trademarks within this guide belong to their legitimate owners. oxt file you've just downloaded Ģ.4-close the main LibreOffice application.ģ.1-open your presentation with LibreOffice Impress ģ.2-the installation of the extension must have created a new menu entry on:ģ.3-It is going to generate a PDF file at the same directory/folder of the original file.This document is Copyright © 2021 by the LibreOffice Documentation Team. There is an extension/add-on called Expand Animations that can be installed to fix this.Ģ.1-open the main LibreOffice application Ģ.2-on the left panel (I'm on LibreOffice 5.4.5.1, for Linux - your version might be different), click on Open File Ģ.3-point to the location of that. There is only one little issue with this: when you use animations/overlays (when you want the topics in a slide to appear one after the other), the PDF version of the slide will be a plain print of all the elements of that slide (hence, no animation effect!).


Then all formating and everything will be as in the original. The easiest solution would be to simply forget about PowerPoint and export the presentation to PDF. If you try PowerPoint it is likely that your equations and some text formating will be messed up. In this cases you have two options: PowerPoint or PDF. It is very usual that you prepare a presentation in LibreOffice Impress and have present it in a computer without LibreOffice installed (i.e., at conferences). Although the newer versions of LibreOffice have pretty good compatibility with MS-Office, some formatting issues still remain - particularly when you prepare a document in LibreOffice and must open it in MS-Office.
