DOT to XWD Converter

Fast DOT to XWD conversion — free online tool

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Browser-Based Tool

No downloads, no plugins — open Convertio in your browser and convert DOT templates to any format right away.

High-Quality Output

Conversion preserves your template formatting, styles, and layout — the output accurately reflects the original DOT content.

Cloud-Powered

Conversion runs entirely on remote servers — your device stays fast and unaffected while the DOT template is processed.

How to convert DOT to XWD

1

Select files from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, URL or by dragging it on the page.

2

Choose xwd or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your xwd file right afterwards

About formats

DOT is the binary template format for Microsoft Word, using the same OLE2 compound document structure as DOC files. A DOT file contains a complete document framework — styles, page layout, margins, headers and footers, boilerplate text, macros, AutoText entries, toolbar customizations, and keyboard shortcuts — that serves as a reusable foundation for creating new documents with consistent formatting. When a user creates a new document based on a DOT template, Word generates a fresh untitled DOC pre-populated with the template's content and styling while leaving the original template file unmodified. The format supports every feature available in DOC, including complex formatting, embedded objects, form fields, and VBA macro code. The Normal.dot file holds particular significance as Word's global template, storing default styles, macros, and customizations that apply to all new blank documents. DOT templates became essential to enterprise document management, ensuring that legal contracts, business letters, technical reports, and corporate communications consistently adhered to organizational formatting standards. One advantage is brand and compliance consistency — distributing DOT files across an organization guarantees uniform document appearance without relying on individual users to manually configure styles and layouts. While the XML-based DOTX format has replaced DOT for modern workflows, the binary template format remains in use in environments requiring Word 97-2003 compatibility and in legacy template libraries.
Developer: Microsoft
Initial release: 1997
XWD (X Window Dump) is a screen capture image format defined as part of the X Window System by the MIT X Consortium, dating to approximately 1987. The xwd command-line utility captures the contents of an X window or the entire screen and saves it as an XWD file — functionally equivalent to a screenshot utility but predating the concept by years. XWD files contain a detailed header specifying the X server's visual type, bit depth, byte order, bitmap unit and padding, the window's dimensions, border width, and color map information, followed by the raw pixel data exactly as represented in the X server's framebuffer. This means XWD files faithfully capture the exact pixel representation used by the display hardware — including server-specific byte ordering, padding, and color organization — making them primarily useful on the system where they were captured or on systems with compatible display configurations. The header also stores the window name string and the full color map entries for indexed-color visuals. XWD supports all X11 visual types: StaticGray, GrayScale, StaticColor, PseudoColor, TrueColor, and DirectColor, at any bit depth supported by the X server. One advantage is exact framebuffer fidelity: XWD captures the window's pixel data in its native format without any color space conversion or compression, making it the definitive record of what the X server was actually displaying. The format's integration with the X11 command-line toolkit provides another practical benefit — xwd can capture specific windows by ID or name, be triggered remotely via SSH, and piped directly to format converters. XWD files are handled by ImageMagick, GIMP, xwud (the viewer companion to xwd), and xv.
Developer: MIT X Consortium
Initial release: 1987

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert DOT to XWD?

Converting from DOT to XWD makes your template content accessible in a different format.

What programs open XWD files?

You can open XWD files with compatible viewers and applications.

Will my template formatting survive the conversion?

Convertio preserves as much formatting as the target format allows. Some layout elements may adapt to fit XWD specifications.

Can I convert multiple DOT files to XWD?

Absolutely — upload several DOT templates and batch-convert them all to XWD in one session. Each file processes independently.

Do I need to install software for this conversion?

No installation needed. The DOT to XWD converter runs entirely in your web browser — just upload and convert.