ODP to PGX Converter

Convert ODP presentation slides to PGX format online, free

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Lossless Precision

PGX stores image data without any compression, ensuring absolute fidelity to the original ODP slide rendering — every pixel is preserved exactly.

Cloud Processing

Conversion happens on remote servers, keeping your local machine free of processing load. Upload, convert, and download from any device.

Multi-Slide Export

All slides from your ODP presentation are converted in one go. Each slide is output as a separate PGX file, ready for your JPEG 2000 workflow.

How to convert ODP to PGX

1

Select files from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, URL or by dragging it on the page.

2

Choose pgx or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your pgx file right afterwards

About formats

ODP (OpenDocument Presentation) is the presentation file format defined by the OpenDocument Format (ODF) standard, developed by the OASIS technical committee and first published as ODF 1.0 on May 1, 2005, later adopted as international standard ISO/IEC 26300. An ODP file is a ZIP archive containing XML documents that describe presentation content, styles, metadata, and settings using a vendor-neutral, royalty-free specification. Slides are defined in content.xml using drawing and presentation namespaces, with separate files for styles, manifest, and embedded media. The format supports text frames, images, charts, tables, shapes, gradients, transparency, slide transitions, animations, master pages, and speaker notes. ODP serves as the native format for LibreOffice Impress, Apache OpenOffice Impress, and Calligra Stage, and can be imported by Microsoft PowerPoint, Google Slides, and other commercial tools. One advantage is vendor independence — ODP is governed by an open standard rather than a single company, ensuring long-term accessibility and freedom from proprietary lock-in. This makes ODP particularly valuable for government agencies, educational institutions, and organizations with digital preservation mandates. The fully documented XML structure is another strength, enabling programmatic generation and processing using any programming language with XML support. ODP is mandated or recommended as a document format by numerous national governments worldwide.
Developer: OASIS
Initial release: May 1, 2005
PGX is a simple single-component raster image format defined as part of the JPEG 2000 standard (ISO/IEC 15444) for use in conformance testing and verification of JPEG 2000 codec implementations. Introduced around 2000 alongside the JPEG 2000 specification itself, PGX files store a single image component (one color channel or grayscale plane) with a text header followed by raw pixel data, providing an unambiguous reference representation against which encoder and decoder outputs can be compared sample by sample. The header is a single ASCII line specifying endianness (ML for big-endian, LM for little-endian), signedness (+ for unsigned, - for signed), bit depth (1 to 32 bits), width, and height. The pixel data follows as raw binary values, each occupying the minimum number of bytes needed for the specified bit depth, with one value per pixel. For multi-component images (like RGB), each component is stored in a separate PGX file. The format's deliberate simplicity — no compression, no metadata, no multi-channel support — ensures there are no ambiguities in interpretation that could mask codec bugs. One advantage is verification precision: PGX's uncompressed, exactly-specified representation allows bit-exact comparison of decoded JPEG 2000 output against reference images, essential for certifying that a codec implementation conforms to the standard. The format's role in the JPEG 2000 conformance testing framework means it is implemented by every serious JPEG 2000 codec (OpenJPEG, Kakadu, etc.) and used in the official ISO conformance test suite. PGX files can also be processed by ImageMagick and various JPEG 2000 development tools.
Initial release: 2000

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert ODP to PGX?

PGX is an uncompressed reference format from the JPEG 2000 ecosystem. It is useful for technical workflows, archival storage, or as input for further JPEG 2000 encoding.

What software opens PGX files?

OpenJPEG tools, MATLAB image processing toolboxes, and specialized JPEG 2000 utilities can read PGX. Some advanced image editors also support it with plugins.

Is PGX a color format?

PGX stores a single image component — essentially grayscale. Color images require combining multiple PGX files, one per channel.

Are PGX files large?

Yes — PGX is uncompressed, so file sizes are larger than compressed formats. This preserves every pixel exactly as rendered from the original slide.

Is this conversion free?

Free ODP to PGX conversions are available for all users. Premium plans provide additional capacity for batch jobs and larger files.