The original Slides presentation will remain in Google Drive after you complete this conversion. You will simply wind up with a copy of the file that is in the PDF file type. Note that the bottom three options will only convert the currently-selected slide to an image file.
If you want to convert more than one slide to an image then you will need to do it individually, turn the file into a PDF and convert it that way, or look to something like an online converter to turn a Powerpoint or PDF copy of the slideshow into a series of images. This is not a feature that is exclusive to Google Slides. While it is often possible to convert a PDF to Google Slides or a Microsoft Powerpoint presentation so that it can be edited, this process is often complicated and has less than desirable results.
If you need to share information with someone and they may need to edit something on one of your slides, then it may be better to keep it in the Google Slides or Powerpoint file format. You simply need to choose the Microsoft Powerpoint. Most newer versions of Powerpoint will be able to open that file type. Depending on the download settings for your Web browser you may not be able to pick the desired folder on your computer for the downloaded PDF version of the file. One other option that is available to you involves selecting the Print settings and preview option from the File menu instead.
After testing on multiple online free PDF converters, Zamzar and ilovePDF are picked as my favorite tool to perform the conversion online free with good formatting. They both bring good-formatting Google Slides and can do the conversion fast. It is safe to use. Also, unlike other online free platforms, there are no distractive advertisements on the webpages. Another online free tool to convert PDF to Google Slides without software is ilovepdf, which can also bring satisfactory conversion outcome by highly retaining the original formatting.
In addition, it can import and export files to cloud services, which makes it quite easy to share and save the converted files. Google Slides supports inserting image, text box, audio and video files. It only takes a minute to sign up. Connect and share knowledge within a single location that is structured and easy to search. The figure is noticeably 'blurry'. Is there any procedure or workaround that would allow for the image to be sharper than this?
The image in google drawing should autoscale and it will look identical. I've observed similar blurriness in embedded drawings created entirely within the Google Doc, but sharper results when inserting a separate Google Drawing. Google Draw is a pitiful tool. For some reason, the drawing capacity is so much better in Google slides.
Plus they have a lot of really advanced diagrams Insert - diagram0. Basically, I make my graphic or text box in slides. Then I go to present mode. Then I open this up in a simple photo editing program even Microsoft Paint. Crop and save as PNG. And then insert THAT into my gdocs. It's a work around but you end up with much better quality graphics.
For some reason, you can't just cut and paste the graphic straight out of the slides into the gdoc. But you can cut and paste between slides presentations. I found a workaround in downloading the drawing in.
Much better resolution. I also recommend increasing the size of the image to at least 4K or more equivalent size basically, a large resolution. This way, the image is clear and high-quality when enlarged. You can also change the scaling to whatever you like afterwards, but try to have an image size that's generally large, in that range, to maximize quality small images will be blurry no matter what.
I had created a new drawing, opened the blurry drawing, copied its contents, and pasted them to the new drawing. The new drawing was vector graphic crisp. However when I changed the color for one of the arrows that was mixed in the z-order of some other shapes I found that the drawing began to render as a pixelated bitmap image when I pressed save and close.
You may be able to use the copy paste technique in a new drawing, but beware you can still revert back to a blurry copy depending upon what you're editing. I may have triggered it using the custom colors option where I wanted to create a darker shade of red and blue to differentiate some details on my drawing.
That's when I began having trouble with the pixelated rendering. The best solution I've found is to open up the drawing and screenshot the image as you want it.
Then if you delete the drawing, just insert the screenshot, and that's a lot cleaner. If you look to keep editing the drawing, I recommend making a copy of the google doc, so that you still have those drawings available in a backup google doc that you're not actively using. I'm not sure if this is the issue the OP was experiencing, but I had a similar experience.
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