AI slide generation skills — fill .pptx/SVG templates with AI text, images, themes, and animations
Project description
Slide Generator Lab
AI slide generation in Python. Take a template (a Canva/PowerPoint .pptx, or
a hand-designed SVG collection), and generate a finished deck whose text,
colors, images, and animations are produced by AI to fit a topic — while the
layout stays exactly as designed.
Built as composable skills so the whole thing can be wired into a FastAPI app.
Published on PyPI as slide-skills.
Install
As a library (use in any project):
pip install slide-skills # latest release from PyPI
# or, the bleeding edge straight from source:
pip install "git+https://github.com/phatgg221/Slide-generator-lab.git"
For development (edit the code, changes apply instantly):
git clone https://github.com/phatgg221/Slide-generator-lab.git
cd Slide-generator-lab
python3 -m venv .venv && source .venv/bin/activate
pip install -e . # editable install
Optional extras:
pip install "slide-skills[svg-convert]" # PyMuPDF, for .pptx -> SVG conversion
pip install "slide-skills[all]" # everything optional
Requirements
| What | Needed for | Notes |
|---|---|---|
OPENAI_API_KEY |
any AI step (text, images, planning) | put in env or a .env file |
| Python ≥ 3.9 | everything | |
resvg-py (auto-installed) |
rendering SVG/web decks | bundled, no system deps |
| LibreOffice | svg_template_maker only (.pptx → SVG) |
brew install --cask libreoffice; optional |
Environment variables (all optional):
OPENAI_API_KEY=sk-... # required for AI calls
OPENAI_TEXT_MODEL=gpt-4o # default
OPENAI_IMAGE_MODEL=gpt-image-1 # skip image-model auto-detection
SLIDE_TEMPLATES_DIR=/path/to/svg/templates # where your SVG collections/categories live
SLIDE_LIBRARY_DIR=/path/to/pptx/templates # where your .pptx templates live
The two *_DIR vars are the key to using this as an installed package: set
them once and the library finds your templates wherever you keep them — your
designs live outside the code package.
Two paths
The project supports two delivery targets that share most of the same skills:
| PPTX path | Web path (current focus) | |
|---|---|---|
| Output | Downloadable PowerPoint file | Self-contained animated HTML for your website |
| Template source | Canva/PowerPoint .pptx |
Hand-designed SVG collections (Figma/Inkscape) |
| Animation | PowerPoint transitions + entrance effects | Native SVG/CSS animation (Canva-like) |
| Main CLI | examples/build_course_deck.py |
examples/web_deck.py |
The web path is preferred because SVG keeps text editable, colors remappable, and animations playable in the browser — and it needs no desktop renderer.
Use as a Python library
Once installed, import the skills from anywhere:
from slide_skills import generate_web_deck
# Topic -> animated HTML deck (writes the file, returns a summary dict)
result = generate_web_deck(
collection="starter", # folder under SLIDE_TEMPLATES_DIR
brief="Khóa học nhập môn Machine Learning",
output_path="out/deck.html",
palette="teal", # "auto" | preset name | (primary, secondary, accent) | None
language="Vietnamese",
animation="rise", # rise | fade | scale | none
)
print(result["output_path"], result["slides"])
print(result["usage"]["report"]) # tokens + estimated USD for this call
Every generate_* call returns a usage block with the total cost of that run:
result["usage"] # {input_tokens, output_tokens, total_tokens, requests,
# estimated_cost_usd, report}
Category library + variant-selecting agent (your plan names categories; the agent picks the best design variant per slide):
from slide_skills import generate_deck_from_plan, scan_template_library
lib = scan_template_library("templates") # discover categories + variants
print(lib.category_map()) # registry for a UI / planner
plan = {"title": "ML 101", "slides": [
{"category": "Title Slide", "topic": "Intro to Machine Learning"},
{"category": "KPI & Big Numbers", "talking_points": ["78%", "3x", "12M"]},
{"category": "Conclusion & Summary", "talking_points": ["Recap", "Next steps"]},
]}
generate_deck_from_plan(plan, "templates", "out/deck.html", palette="auto", language="Vietnamese")
Add a collection at runtime (e.g. a user uploads a Figma export):
from slide_skills import import_collection
import_collection("/path/to/figma_export_folder", "my_style") # copies + validates
Track cost of any run:
from slide_skills import usage_tracker
before = usage_tracker.snapshot()
# ... generate ...
print((usage_tracker.snapshot() - before).report())
In a FastAPI app, wrap blocking calls in a thread:
import asyncio
from fastapi import FastAPI
from fastapi.responses import FileResponse
from slide_skills import generate_web_deck
app = FastAPI()
@app.post("/generate")
async def generate(topic: str, collection: str = "starter"):
out = "out/deck.html"
await asyncio.to_thread(generate_web_deck, collection, topic, out)
return FileResponse(out, media_type="text/html")
(Set SLIDE_TEMPLATES_DIR so the app finds your collections.)
Quick start (CLI) — Web deck from an SVG collection
# 1. See available collections
.venv/bin/python examples/web_deck.py list
# 2. Validate a collection — what placeholders did it find? (free, offline)
.venv/bin/python examples/web_deck.py check starter
# 3. Visual preview with stub text (free, offline)
.venv/bin/python examples/web_deck.py demo starter
open out/starter_demo.html
# 4. Generate a real deck from a topic (~$0.02)
.venv/bin/python examples/web_deck.py generate starter \
"Khóa học nhập môn Machine Learning" -o out/ml_deck.html --language Vietnamese
open out/ml_deck.html
In the browser deck: →/← to navigate, f for fullscreen, elements animate in as each slide appears.
Options: --palette teal (force a theme), --animation rise|fade|scale|none,
--pptx (also export a PowerPoint copy).
Designing your own SVG collections
You design collections once in Figma/Inkscape; every generated deck reuses them. A collection is a folder of slide-type SVGs sharing one visual style:
svg_templates/<collection>/
collection.json # optional: description, palette, fonts, tags
title.svg # filename = slide type the planner picks from
statistic.svg
comparison.svg ...
Rules (see svg_templates/README.md for the full guide):
- Export SVG with "Outline Text" UNCHECKED — text must stay live
<text>. - Placeholders are the text content:
{{title}},{{quote|120}}(120-char budget),{{body.1}}/{{body.2}}(multi-line). - One uniform style per placeholder (don't bold half a word — it splits the text).
- Name files by function (
title,statistic,quote…); use common fonts.
Then web_deck.py check / demo your folder before spending on generation.
Category library + variant-selecting agent
For richer decks, organize templates into categories, each holding several variant designs for the same layout function. The user's plan names a category per slide; an agent picks the best-fitting variant for the data.
templates/
TITLE_SLIDE/
category.json # optional: descriptions guiding variant choice
centered.svg # variants — multiple designs, same purpose
left_aligned.svg
KPI_BIG_NUMBERS/
category.json
three_stats.svg
list_style.svg
category.json (optional but recommended — it's the "map" the agent reads):
{
"description": "Highlight key metrics with large, scannable numbers.",
"variants": {
"three_stats": "Three stat callouts — use for 2-3 key numbers.",
"list_style": "A vertical list — use for 4+ numbers or rankings."
}
}
How a variant gets chosen, per slide:
- schema-fit shortlist (code) — keep variants whose slot count fits the data
- AI tiebreak (GPT-4o) — read each finalist's description + slots and the slide content, pick the best, and write its text
Adding designs is pure data:
- New variant → drop a
.svgin the category folder (instantly usable; add acategory.jsonline so the agent knows when to choose it). - New category → make a new folder; it appears in
category_map()automatically.
Category names match plan labels ignoring case/spaces/&/-/_
("KPI & Big Numbers" → KPI_BIG_NUMBERS), but not plurals — name folders to
match your plan labels.
Quick start — PowerPoint deck from a .pptx template
# Ingest any .pptx into the reusable template library (cleans junk, classifies slides)
.venv/bin/python examples/prepare_template.py "~/Downloads/My Design.pptx" my_template
# See what's editable (free, offline)
.venv/bin/python examples/test_template.py my_template
# Full pipeline: research -> plan -> write -> images -> theme -> animate
.venv/bin/python examples/build_course_deck.py library/my_template.pptx \
"your topic" --transition fade --animate fade -o out/deck.pptx
Cost controls: --no-research, --no-images, --svg-images (cheap vector
illustrations instead of AI photos).
Skills reference (slide_skills/)
Foundation
config.py— OpenAI client + model config from.envusage.py— token & cost tracking across all AI calls (usage_tracker)template_parser.py— parse a.pptxinto a fill-spec; classify text roles, char budgets; skip tip-bubbles & navigation buttons
Research → Plan → Write
research.py—extract_keywords,web_researchplanner.py—plan_deck: AI picks slide count, types, order, themecontent_generator.py—generate_content: AI writes budget-aware textagent.py—SlideGeneratorAgent: fill one template from a briefpipeline.py—CourseDeckPipeline: the full chained pipeline
Images
image_generator.py—generate_image: AI photos, auto-detects account's modelsvg_image_generator.py—generate_svg_image: GPT-4o vector art (~5× cheaper)
Filling & assembly
slide_filler.py— write text keeping formatting, auto-shrink overflow, swap imagesassembler.py— build a deck by picking/reordering/repeating library slides
Templating
template_maker.py—prepare_template: ingest + clean + AI-classify a.pptxmerge_template.py—{{placeholder}}form + schema; AI fills; rendersvg_template_maker.py—.pptx→ folder of live-text SVGs (needs LibreOffice/PowerPoint)
Theme & motion
theme.py— contrast-safe recoloring, 8 presets,propose_palettetransitions.py— PowerPoint slide transitionsanimations.py— PowerPoint element entrance animations
Web decks
svg_collections.py— scan collections, fill placeholders, retheme,import_collection,generate_web_decksvg_categories.py— category library + variant-selecting agent:scan_template_library,select_and_fill_slide,generate_deck_from_planhtml_deck.py— build a self-contained animated HTML presentationsvg_slide_renderer.py— filled SVGs → PNG →.pptxexport
Command-line tools (examples/)
| Command | Purpose |
|---|---|
web_deck.py |
SVG collections → animated web deck (list/check/demo/generate) |
build_course_deck.py |
Full pipeline → .pptx |
generate_deck.py |
Fill one template from a brief |
prepare_template.py |
Ingest a .pptx into the template library |
test_template.py |
Dry-run marker fill — see what's editable (free) |
recolor_deck.py |
Re-theme an existing deck's colors |
merge_deck.py |
{{placeholder}} workflow (make/render/generate) |
What can be customized per deck
- Words — every
{{placeholder}}is AI-written, any language - Colors — preset, AI-picked, or custom; always contrast-safe
- Animation — rise / fade / scale / none (web) or PowerPoint effects (pptx)
- Slides — the planner chooses which template types to use, and their order
Fixed by design: your layout, and (for now) fonts.
Tests (offline, no API key)
.venv/bin/python tests/test_offline_pipeline.py # parse / fill / image swap
.venv/bin/python tests/test_assembler.py # library assembly
Known limits
- Canva exports lose animation and live text.
.pptxfrom Canva is static; Canva SVG outlines all text. Design real SVG templates in Figma/Inkscape. svg_template_maker.pyneeds a renderer. Install LibreOffice (brew install --cask libreoffice) for headless, server-ready conversion; the desktop-PowerPoint fallback is fragile.- Charts aren't data-driven yet. Chart-style slides render as designed art, not recomputed from numbers.
- FastAPI app is a later milestone; all skills are import-ready for it.
Releasing a new version (maintainers)
# 1. bump version in BOTH pyproject.toml and slide_skills/__init__.py
# 2. rebuild fresh and publish
rm -rf dist && python -m build
twine upload dist/* # username: __token__ password: your pypi-... token
# 3. tag it
git tag v0.2.2 && git push origin main --tags
PyPI versions are permanent — never reuse a number; bump to the next one.
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