I created a PowerPoint presentation using C#:

PowerPoint.Application powerpointApplication;
PowerPoint.Presentation pptPresentation;
PowerPoint.Slide Slide;

// Create an instance of PowerPoint.
powerpointApplication = new PowerPoint.ApplicationClass();

// Create a PowerPoint presentation.
pptPresentation = powerpointApplication.Presentations.Add(
Microsoft.Office.Core.MsoTriState.msoTrue);


// Create empty slide
Slide = pptPresentation.Slides.Add(1, PowerPoint.PpSlideLayout.ppLayoutBlank);

TextRange objTextRng = objSlide.Shapes[1].TextFrame.TextRange;
objTextRng.Text = "Remote sensing calendar 1";
objTextRng.Font.Name = "Comic Sans MS";
objTextRng.Font.Size = 48;
// TODO: change color
// objTextRng.Font.Color 



// Save presentation
pptPresentation.SaveAs( BasePath + "result\\2_example.ppt", 
                       PowerPoint.PpSaveAsFileType.ppSaveAsDefault, 
                       MsoTriState.msoTrue // TODO: что за параметр???
                      );
pptPresentation.Close();

Now, how can I change the font color for objTextRng?

link|improve this question
feedback

3 Answers

The following code will set the font color to red:

objTextRng.Font.Color.RGB = Color.Red.ToArgb();

If you want to specify a different color, you can use one of the other pre-defined colors, or specify your own RGB values using the Color.FromArgb method.

Either way, make sure that you call the ToArgb method on the Color object that you use. The RGB property requires that an RGB color value be specified.

link|improve this answer
feedback

I think this MSDN page explain it.

EDIT: But this only explain how to do it in VBScript. You can see that the TextRange object have a property Font. This returns the Font object describe here These resources show you that you have access to a RGB property. You can set it like Cody told you. If you need further info, refer to the MSDN section I just point you.

link|improve this answer
You can certainly glean the explanation from that page, but it's talking about a DropCap rather than a TextRange object, and the sample code is presented in VB 6.0/VBScript, which is not easily translatable to C#. In particular, there is no RGB function in C#. – Cody Gray Mar 9 '11 at 14:39
I agree, I just didn't want to put only the link. It's sometimes annoying, so I just copied the code example. – Philippe Lavoie Mar 9 '11 at 14:41
Again though, the problem is that the code sample will not work in C#, as the question is tagged. There's no RGB function, you have to do it like my answer suggests (which is the preferred way) or import the Microsoft.VisualBasic namespace to use the Information.RGB function. – Cody Gray Mar 9 '11 at 14:43
@you guys: that link is for Publisher 2010. Not the same as PowerPoint. – Otaku Mar 9 '11 at 16:26
feedback

Use this for PPTX 2007

    private int BGR(Color color)
    {
        // PowerPoint's color codes seem to be reversed (i.e., BGR) not RGB
        //      0x0000FF    produces RED not BLUE
        //      0xFF0000    produces BLUE not RED
        // so we have to produce the color "in reverse"

        int iColor = color.R + 0xFF * color.G + 0xFFFF * color.B;

        return iColor;
    }

for example

    shape.TextFrame.TextRange.Font.Color.RGB = BGR(Color.Red);  
link|improve this answer
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.