Convert ODP to TXT

Free online ODP to TXT converter. No signup required.

Drag & drop your file here

or click to browse

Max file size: 100 MB

Why Convert ODP to TXT?

Understand when and why this conversion makes sense for your workflow.

Converting OpenDocument Presentation to Plain Text addresses one of the most practical challenges in modern work: sharing and editing documents across different platforms and applications. Document formats vary widely in how they store text, images, fonts, and layout — meaning a file that looks perfect in one program may render incorrectly in another. Converting to the right format ensures that your content is either fully editable or perfectly preserved for distribution, depending on what you need.

OpenDocument Presentation has a known limitation: some PowerPoint animations and effects may not convert perfectly. In contrast, Plain Text offers a key advantage: universal compatibility with every text editor and operating system ever created. While OpenDocument Presentation is commonly used for presentation creation in libreoffice and openoffice, Plain Text is better suited for configuration files, scripts, and source code.

MegaConvert handles the ODP-to-TXT conversion automatically, preserving your document's structure and content as faithfully as the formats allow — no software installation required.

ODP vs TXT: Format Comparison

Side-by-side comparison of the source and target formats.

PropertyODP (Source)TXT (Target)
Extension.odp.txt
Full NameOpenDocument PresentationPlain Text
CompressionVariesVaries
File SizeVariesSmall
Best ForPresentation creation in LibreOffice and Open…Configuration files, scripts, and source code
Browser SupportVariesWide

How to Convert ODP to TXT

Follow these simple steps to convert your file in seconds.

  1. Upload your ODP document

    Select your .odp file from your computer. OpenDocument Presentation documents — including those with embedded images, tables, footnotes, and complex layouts — are supported. Larger documents may take a moment longer to parse before conversion begins.

  2. Click "Convert to TXT"

    Press the convert button. We parse the structure of the OpenDocument Presentation document — text, headings, lists, tables, images — and rebuild it in Plain Text format. Fonts are embedded where the target supports it. The conversion typically completes in a few seconds.

  3. Wait for the document to render

    Most document conversions finish in under five seconds. Complex documents with many embedded images, tables, or footnotes may take a little longer to render — the converter takes the time it needs to preserve formatting accurately.

  4. Download your .txt file

    When the conversion finishes, click the download link to save the new Plain Text file to your computer. The file is yours — no watermarks, no expiration on the file itself, and no MegaConvert account is required to download it.

Tips for Converting ODP to TXT

Practical advice to get the best results from this conversion.

Why this conversion is worth doing

OpenDocument Presentation has a known limitation: some PowerPoint animations and effects may not convert perfectly. Plain Text addresses this with a key advantage: universal compatibility with every text editor and operating system ever created. Converting from ODP to TXT is most worthwhile when this specific trade-off matters for the way you intend to use the file.

Match the format to the actual workflow

OpenDocument Presentation is most commonly used for presentation creation in libreoffice and openoffice, while Plain Text is the standard for configuration files, scripts, and source code. If your workflow is closer to the second pattern, converting makes sense. If you are still working in a context where ODP is the norm, converting may create unnecessary compatibility friction with collaborators or tools that expect the source format.

Watch for this limitation in the TXT output

Plain Text has its own limitation worth understanding before you commit: no support for any text formatting, images, or layout. After the conversion completes, open the TXT file and verify that this limitation does not affect your specific use case — for some workflows it is irrelevant; for others it can be a deal-breaker.

Understand the editing vs. viewing trade-off

Some document formats are designed for editing (DOCX, ODT), while others are intended for final distribution (PDF). Converting to PDF locks in your formatting and makes it difficult to edit the content later. If you plan to revise the document further, keep an editable source copy before converting.

Understanding ODP and TXT Formats

Learn about the source and target file formats to understand what happens during conversion.

Source Format

OpenDocument Presentation

application/vnd.oasis.opendocument.presentation

ODP (OpenDocument Presentation) is an open-standard presentation format defined by the OASIS OpenDocument specification. It is the native format for LibreOffice Impress and Apache OpenOffice Impress, storing slides with text, images, transitions, and animations in XML within a ZIP archive. ODP provides a vendor-neutral alternative to proprietary PowerPoint formats.

Advantages

  • Open standard that is free from vendor lock-in
  • Native support in LibreOffice Impress and OpenOffice Impress
  • Well-defined XML format allowing programmatic manipulation

Limitations

  • Some PowerPoint animations and effects may not convert perfectly
  • Less widely adopted in corporate environments than PPTX
  • Limited template and design theme availability compared to PowerPoint

Common Uses

  • Presentation creation in LibreOffice and OpenOffice
  • Government and education presentations requiring open formats
  • Cross-platform presentations without Microsoft Office dependency

Target Format

Plain Text

text/plain

TXT (Plain Text) is the simplest document format, containing only unformatted text characters with no styling, images, or metadata. It uses standard character encodings like ASCII or UTF-8 and can be opened by any text editor on any platform. Plain text files are the most universal and long-lived document format in computing.

Advantages

  • Universal compatibility with every text editor and operating system ever created
  • Extremely small file sizes with no overhead
  • Human-readable and future-proof with no risk of format obsolescence

Limitations

  • No support for any text formatting, images, or layout
  • No metadata, hyperlinks, or structural elements
  • Character encoding differences can cause display issues across platforms

Common Uses

  • Configuration files, scripts, and source code
  • README files and simple documentation
  • Data interchange and log files

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about converting ODP to TXT.

Related Conversions

Explore other conversions related to ODP and TXT.