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page_type urlFragment products languages extensions description
sample
powerpoint-add-in-hello-world
office-powerpoint
office
javascript
contentType technologies createdDate
samples
Add-ins
10/11/2021 10:00:00 AM
Create a simple PowerPoint add-in that displays hello world.

Create an PowerPoint add-in that displays hello world

Summary

Learn how to build the simplest Office Add-in with only a manifest, HTML web page, and a logo. This sample will help you understand the fundamental parts of an Office Add-in.

Features

  • Display hello world in PowerPoint.
  • Learn fundamentals of the manifest.
  • Learn how to initialize the Office JavaScript API library.
  • Interact with document content through Office JavaScript APIs.

Applies to

  • PowerPoint on Windows, Mac, and in a browser.

Prerequisites

  • Microsoft 365 - You can get a free developer sandbox that provides a renewable 90-day Microsoft 365 E5 developer subscription.

Understand an Office Add-in

An Office Add-in is a web application that can extend Office with additional functionality for the user. For example, an add-in can add ribbon buttons, a task pane, or a content pane with the functionality you want. Because an Office Add-in is a web application you must provide a web server to host the files.

The sample contained in this folder is a sample that is designed to run in PowerPoint.

Key components

The hello world sample implements the Manifest and Web app components identified in Components of an Office Add-in.

Manifest

The manifest file is an XML file that describes your add-in to Office. It contains information such as a unique identifier, name, what buttons to show on the ribbon, and more. Importantly the manifest provides URL locations for where Office can find and download the add-in's resource files.

The hello world sample contains two manifest files to support two different web hosting scenarios.

  • manifest.xml: This manifest file gets the add-in's HTML page from the original GitHub repo location. This is the quickest way to try out the sample. To get started running the add-in with this manifest, see Run the sample on PowerPoint on Windows.
  • manifest.localhost.xml: This manifest file gets the add-in's HTML page from a local web server that you configure. Use this manifest if you want to change the code and experiment. For more information, see Configure a localhost web server.

Web app

The hello world sample implements a task pane named taskpane.html that contains HTML and JavaScript. The taskpane.html file contains all the code necessary to display a task pane, interact with the user, and write "Hello world!" into cell 'A1' on the active Worksheet.

Initialize the Office JavaScript API library

The sample initializes the Office JavaScript API library with a call to office.onReady() in the taskpane.html file. This is required before you can make any calls to the Office JavaScript APIs. For more information about initialization, see Initialize your Office Add-in.

Office.onReady((info) => {});

Write to a PowerPoint object

When the user chooses the Say hello button, the sayHello() function is called. This function calls Office.context.document.setSelectedDataAsync() with an empty string (space). This will clear the text of the currently selected object. Then it calls setSelectedDataAsync() again and passes "Hello world!". The currently selected object will now display "Hello world!".

For more information see Build your first PowerPoint task pane add-in

async function sayHello() {
  // Set coercion type to text since
  const options = { coercionType: Office.CoercionType.Text };

  // clear current selection
  await Office.context.document.setSelectedDataAsync(' ', options);

  // Set text in selection to 'Hello world!'
  await Office.context.document.setSelectedDataAsync('Hello world!', options);
}

Run the sample on PowerPoint on web

An Office Add-in requires you to configure a web server to provide all the resources, such as HTML, image, and JavaScript files. The hello world sample is configured so that the files are hosted directly from this GitHub repo. Use the following steps to sideload the manifest.xml file to see the sample run.

  1. Download the manifest.xml file from the sample folder for PowerPoint.

  2. Open Office on the web.

  3. Choose PowerPoint, and then open a new blank presentation.

  4. On the Insert tab on the ribbon in the Add-ins section, choose Add-ins.

  5. On the Office Add-ins dialog, select the MY ADD-INS tab, choose Manage My Add-ins, and then Upload My Add-in.

    The Office Add-ins dialog with a drop-down in the upper right reading "Manage my add-ins" and a drop-down below it with the option "Upload My Add-in"

  6. Browse to the add-in manifest file, and then select Upload.

    The upload add-in dialog with buttons for browse, upload, and cancel.

  7. Verify that the add-in loaded successfully. You will see a Hello world button on the Home tab on the ribbon.

  8. Choose the Hello world button to display the task pane of the add-in.

  9. Position your cursor in the Slide where you want to insert the text.

  10. Choose the Say Hello button to insert "Hello world!" into the current PowerPoint slide.

Run the sample on PowerPoint on Windows or Mac

Office Add-ins are cross-platform so you can also run them on Windows, Mac, and iPad. The following links will take you to documentation for how to sideload on Windows, Mac, or iPad. Be sure you have a local copy of the manifest.xml file for the Hello world sample. Then follow the sideloading instructions for your platform.

Configure a localhost web server and run the sample from localhost

If you prefer to configure a web server and host the add-in's web files from your computer, use the following steps:

  1. Install a recent version of npm and Node.js on your computer. To verify if you've already installed these tools, run the commands node -v and npm -v in your terminal.

  2. You need http-server to run the local web server. If you haven't installed this yet you can do this with the following command:

    npm install --global http-server
  3. You need Office-Addin-dev-certs to generate self-signed certificates to run the local web server. If you haven't installed this yet you can do this with the following command:

    npm install --global office-addin-dev-certs
  4. Clone or download this sample to a folder on your computer. Then go to that folder in a console or terminal window.

  5. Run the following command to generate a self-signed certificate that you can use for the web server.

    npx office-addin-dev-certs install

    The previous command will display the folder location where it generated the certificate files.

  6. Go to the folder location where the certificate files were generated. Copy the localhost.crt and localhost.key files to the hello world sample folder.

  7. Run the following command:

    http-server -S -C localhost.crt -K localhost.key --cors . -p 3000

    The http-server will run and host the current folder's files on localhost:3000.

Now that your localhost web server is running, you can sideload the manifest-localhost.xml file provided in the powerpoint-hello-world folder. Using the manifest-localhost.xml file, follow the steps in Run the sample on PowerPoint on web to sideload and run the add-in.

Questions and feedback

  • Did you experience any problems with the sample? Create an issue and we'll help you out.
  • We'd love to get your feedback about this sample. Go to our Office samples survey to give feedback and suggest improvements.
  • For general questions about developing Office Add-ins, go to Microsoft Q&A using the office-js-dev tag.

Copyright

Copyright (c) 2021 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information, see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact opencode@microsoft.com with any additional questions or comments.