POT to TXT Converter

Extract text from POT templates to plain TXT — free online

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Raw Text Extraction

Get pure text content from your POT template with no formatting overhead. Perfect for content migration, indexing, or quick reference.

Processed in the Cloud

All text extraction runs on our servers. Your device is never burdened — even large multi-slide templates are processed quickly.

No Registration Needed

Start extracting text immediately — no sign-up, no email verification. Upload your POT and download TXT in seconds.

How to convert POT to TXT

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

POT (PowerPoint Template) is the binary template format for Microsoft PowerPoint, using the same OLE2 compound document structure as PPT files. A POT file contains a complete presentation structure — slide masters, color schemes, font definitions, placeholder layouts, background designs, and default formatting — that serves as a reusable foundation for new presentations with consistent branding. When a user creates a new presentation from a POT template, PowerPoint generates a fresh untitled document pre-populated with the template's design elements while leaving the original file unmodified. The format supports all visual features available in PPT including custom slide layouts, embedded graphics, animations, transition presets, and action buttons on master slides. POT templates became central to corporate identity management in organizations that standardized their visual communications through PowerPoint, ensuring every department produced presentations with approved logos, color palettes, fonts, and layouts. One advantage is brand consistency at scale — distributing a POT file across an organization guarantees that all new presentations inherit the correct visual identity without requiring each author to manually replicate design elements. Rapid document creation is another strength: presenters start with professional layouts and focus on content rather than design, reducing preparation time. While the XML-based POTX format has replaced POT for modern workflows, the binary template format remains in use where compatibility with PowerPoint 97-2003 is required.
Developer: Microsoft
Initial release: 1997
TXT (Plain Text) is the most fundamental digital document format, storing unformatted text as a sequence of character codes with no embedded styling, layout instructions, or metadata beyond the characters themselves. The foundation of plain text computing traces to the ASCII standard published in 1963 by the American Standards Association (now ANSI), which defined 128 character codes including uppercase and lowercase Latin letters, digits, punctuation, and control characters. Modern plain text files typically use UTF-8 encoding, a variable-width Unicode scheme that encompasses virtually every writing system worldwide while maintaining backward compatibility with ASCII. Line endings vary by platform convention — LF on Unix/macOS, CR+LF on Windows — though most contemporary tools handle both transparently. One advantage is absolute universality — TXT files can be created, read, and edited on every computing device ever manufactured, from 1960s mainframes to modern smartphones, without any specialized software. The minimal overhead is another core strength: plain text carries zero formatting baggage, making TXT files ideal for configuration files, log output, data interchange, source code, scripts, and any context where content must be processed programmatically. Plain text serves as the substrate for structured formats like CSV, JSON, XML, YAML, and Markdown, and remains the input/output medium for virtually all command-line tools and programming environments. Despite decades of richer alternatives, TXT endures as the one truly universal document format.
Developer: ANSI
Initial release: 1963

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert POT to TXT?

TXT strips everything down to raw text — useful for indexing, scripting, content analysis, or pasting slide content into any application without formatting clutter.

What opens TXT files?

Every operating system includes a text editor — Notepad on Windows, TextEdit on macOS, nano or vim on Linux. TXT is the most universally readable format.

Are images included in the TXT output?

No. TXT is a text-only format. Only characters from slide titles, body text, and notes are extracted — all visuals are omitted.

Does the text follow slide order?

Yes — content is extracted sequentially, maintaining the slide-by-slide progression of your original POT template.

Is POT to TXT free?

Standard text extraction is free on Convertio. Premium plans provide additional capacity for bulk or frequent conversions.

Can I use this for data extraction?

Definitely. Converting POT to TXT gives you machine-readable text that is easy to parse, search, or feed into data processing pipelines.

POT to TXT Quality Rating

4.5 (11 votes)
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