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antigravity-skills-reference/skills/python-pptx-generator/SKILL.md
Ashith Fernandes de1eca7376 feat(skills): add python-pptx generator skill for automated presentat… (#465)
* feat(skills): add python-pptx generator skill for automated presentation coding

* fix(skills): add compliant python-pptx generator skill

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Co-authored-by: sickn33 <sickn33@users.noreply.github.com>
2026-04-06 20:25:47 +02:00

4.1 KiB

name, description, category, risk, source, source_type, date_added, author, tags, tools
name description category risk source source_type date_added author tags tools
python-pptx-generator Generate complete Python scripts that build polished PowerPoint decks with python-pptx and real slide content. development safe self self 2026-04-06 spideyashith
python
powerpoint
python-pptx
presentations
slide-decks
claude
cursor
gemini
codex

Python PPTX Generator

Overview

Use this skill when the user wants a ready-to-run Python script that creates a PowerPoint presentation with python-pptx. It focuses on turning a topic brief into a complete slide deck script with real slide content, sensible structure, and a working save step.

When to Use This Skill

  • Use when the user wants a Python script that generates a .pptx file automatically
  • Use when the user needs slide content drafted and encoded directly into python-pptx
  • Use when the user wants a quick presentation generator for demos, classes, or internal briefings

How It Works

Step 1: Collect the Deck Brief

Ask for the topic, audience, tone, and target number of slides if the request does not already include them. If constraints are missing, pick conservative defaults and state them in the generated script comments.

Step 2: Plan the Narrative Arc

Outline the deck before writing code:

  1. Title slide
  2. Agenda or context
  3. Core teaching or business points
  4. Summary or next steps

Keep the slide count realistic for the requested audience and avoid filler slides.

Step 3: Generate the Python Script

Write a complete script that:

  • imports Presentation from python-pptx
  • creates the deck
  • selects appropriate built-in layouts
  • writes real titles and bullet points
  • saves the file with a clear filename
  • prints a success message after saving

Step 4: Keep the Output Runnable

The final answer should be a Python code block that can run after installing python-pptx. Avoid pseudocode, placeholders, or missing imports.

Examples

Example 1: Educational Deck

User: Create a 5-slide presentation on the basics of machine learning for a high school class.
Output: A complete Python script that creates a title slide, overview, core concepts, examples, and recap.

Example 2: Business Briefing

User: Generate a 7-slide deck for sales leadership on Q2 pipeline risks and mitigation options.
Output: A python-pptx script with executive-friendly slide titles, concise bullets, and a final recommendations slide.

Best Practices

  • Use standard python-pptx layouts unless the user asks for custom positioning
  • Write audience-appropriate bullet points instead of placeholders
  • Save the output file explicitly in the script, for example output.pptx
  • Keep slide titles short and the bullet hierarchy readable
  • Do not return partial snippets that require the user to assemble the rest
  • Do not invent unsupported styling APIs without checking python-pptx capabilities

Security & Safety Notes

  • Install python-pptx only in an environment you control, for example a local virtual environment
  • If the user will run the script on a shared machine, choose a safe output path and avoid overwriting existing presentations without confirmation
  • If the request includes proprietary or sensitive presentation content, keep it out of public examples and sample filenames

Common Pitfalls

  • Problem: The generated script uses placeholder text instead of real content
    Solution: Draft the narrative first, then turn each slide into specific titles and bullets

  • Problem: The deck uses too many slides for the requested audience
    Solution: Compress the outline to the most important 4 to 8 slides unless the user explicitly wants a longer deck

  • Problem: The script forgets to save or print a completion message
    Solution: Always end with prs.save(...) and a short success print

  • @pptx-official - Use when the task is about inspecting or editing existing PowerPoint files
  • @docx-official - Use when the requested output should be a document instead of a slide deck