PPTM to TXT Converter

Extract text from PPTM slides — free online

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Pure Text Extraction

Distills your PPTM down to just the words — slide titles, body text, and notes arrive as a clean TXT you can paste anywhere.

Near-Instant Results

Text extraction from PPTM is extremely fast. Even decks with hundreds of slides produce a TXT output in seconds.

Zero Code Carryover

TXT cannot contain macros, scripts, or formatting code. Converting PPTM to plain text is the most thorough way to strip executable content.

How to convert PPTM 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

PPTM is a macro-enabled presentation format for Microsoft PowerPoint, introduced with Office 2007 as part of the Office Open XML family. Structurally identical to PPTX — a ZIP archive containing XML parts for slides, layouts, themes, and media — PPTM adds the ability to store and execute VBA (Visual Basic for Applications) macro code within the presentation. The deliberate separation of macro-enabled (.pptm) and macro-free (.pptx) extensions was a security design decision: users and administrators can identify macro-containing files by extension alone, and security policies can block or warn about macro-enabled formats while freely allowing standard PPTX files. PPTM files store VBA projects in a dedicated binary stream (vbaProject.bin) within the ZIP package, alongside the same XML slide content used by PPTX. Macros in PowerPoint presentations power automated slide generation, custom ribbon interfaces, interactive quizzes, data-driven content updates, and integration with external data sources. One advantage is workflow automation — PPTM enables repeatable processes like generating monthly report decks from database queries or updating financial charts across dozens of slides with a single button click. The format preserves full compatibility with the OOXML specification, meaning all standard PowerPoint features — transitions, animations, embedded media, SmartArt — work identically to PPTX. PPTM is supported by Microsoft PowerPoint on Windows and macOS, with macro execution limited to the desktop application.
Developer: Microsoft
Initial release: January 30, 2007
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 PPTM to TXT?

TXT gives you the raw text of every slide in a universal, lightweight format — ideal for indexing, searching, scripting, or feeding into other workflows.

How do I open TXT?

Any text editor opens TXT instantly — Notepad, TextEdit, nano, VS Code, Sublime Text. Even terminal commands like cat display TXT content directly.

Does conversion keep slide formatting?

TXT is a plain-text format. Bold, italic, colors, and layout are discarded. You get pure, unformatted text organized by slide order.

What happens to images and charts?

Visual elements do not transfer to TXT — only readable text from text boxes, titles, and speaker notes is captured in the output.

Are macros removed in TXT?

Completely. TXT cannot hold executable code. Converting PPTM to TXT is one of the simplest ways to strip everything except the written content.

Is this free?

Yes. Convertio converts PPTM to TXT for free. Paid plans unlock higher file-size limits for larger corporate presentations.

PPTM to TXT Quality Rating

4.3 (32 votes)
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