1) Upload PPT file to convert
Drop files here, or Click to select
2) Set converting PPT to PDF options
3) Get converted file
Total Image Converter
JPEG, TIFF, PSD, PNG, etc.
Rotate Images
Resize Images
RAW photos
Watermarks
Clear interface
Command line💾 Upload Your File: Go to the site, click on «Upload File,» and select your PPT file.
✍️ Set Conversion Options: Choose PDF as the output format and adjust any additional options if needed.
Convert and Download: Click 👉«Download Converted File»👈 to get your PDF file.
| File extension | .PPT, .PPS |
| Category | Document File |
| Description | The PPT is the file format used in Microsoft Office OS earlier than 2007 for creating presentations in PowerPoint. The PPT is a binary file, which is a set of separate slides. It can be created from a template or not and edited when you need. It contains multimedia (images, graphs, video, sounds), text and various effects, such as transitions from slide to slide. This dynamic presentation is a perfect tool for various business or educational aims and may be presented live on a computer, copied to a carrier or printed. |
| Associated programs | Apple Keynote Microsoft PowerPoint OpenOffice |
| Developed by | Microsoft |
| MIME type | application/vnd.ms-powerpoint |
| Useful links | More detailed information on PPT files |
| Conversion type | PPT to PDF |
| File extension | |
| Category | Document File |
| Description | Adobe Systems Portable Document Format (PDF) format provides all the contents of a printed document in electronic form, including text and images, as well as technical details like links, scales, graphs, and interactive content. You can open this file in free Acrobat Reader and scroll through the page or the entire document, which is generally one or more pages. The PDF format is used to save pre-designed periodicals, brochures, and flyers. |
| Associated programs | Adobe Viewer Ghostscript Ghostview Xpdf CoolUtils PDF Viewer |
| Developed by | Adobe Systems |
| MIME type | application/pdf application/x-pdf |
| Useful links | More detailed information on PDF files |
PowerPoint's .ppt format dates to Office 97 and remains locked inside the Microsoft ecosystem. Recipients without Word 2003 or Office compatibility packs cannot open the file — they see nothing or get a garbled mess. PDF fixes that: the layout is frozen at the moment of export, every font is embedded, and the file opens identically in any browser, on any OS, without any Office installation. Whether you are submitting a conference paper, sharing a client proposal, or archiving a board presentation, PDF is the format that survives the journey.
PPT is the binary presentation format introduced by Microsoft in PowerPoint 97. It stores slides as a series of records in a proprietary binary structure. The format was superseded by PPTX (an Open XML zip archive) in Office 2007, but .ppt files remain common in corporate archives, university lecture repos, and legacy shared drives.
| Property | PPT | |
|---|---|---|
| Developed by | Microsoft (1987) | Adobe (1993), now ISO 32000 open standard |
| Format type | Binary proprietary (editable slide deck) | Fixed-layout document (read-only by default) |
| Font handling | Fonts referenced by name; must exist on viewer's PC | Fonts embedded in the file; render identically anywhere |
| Editability | Fully editable: text, shapes, animations, transitions | Not editable without specialist PDF editor |
| Animations | Supported — slides animate during slideshow | Not supported — each slide becomes a static page |
| File size | Larger (binary, no compression) | Smaller due to stream compression; depends on image content |
| Platform support | Requires Office or compatible app | Every browser, OS, and device opens PDF natively |
| Print fidelity | Output depends on printer driver and fonts installed | Identical output on any printer — WYSIWYG |
The converter parses the PPT binary stream, reconstructing each slide's drawing layer: text boxes, images, shapes, and background fills. Fonts referenced in the PPT are resolved and embedded in the PDF output so the recipient sees the correct typeface regardless of what is installed on their machine. Each slide maps to one PDF page at the same aspect ratio (typically 4:3 or 16:9). Slide transitions and animations are discarded — PDF has no animation model — but all visual content on each slide is preserved as static vector and raster layers.