FIG to VIPS Converter

FIG to VIPS — clean image output, free online

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Accurate Results

FIG to VIPS conversion that respects your original layout. Elements, shapes, and text carry over faithfully.

Instant Access

No signup necessary. Visit the page, upload your FIG file, and get results without creating any account.

Simple Workflow

Upload, pick a format, download. Three steps from FIG file to converted output — designed for clarity.

How to convert FIG to VIPS

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

FIG is the native file format of Xfig, a free vector graphics editor for the X Window System, originally written by Supoj Sutanthavibul at the University of Texas at Austin in 1985. The format uses a plain-text structure where each graphic object is described on one or more lines with numeric parameters specifying object type, coordinates, line properties, fill attributes, and depth ordering. FIG supports compound objects (groups), polylines, polygons, splines, arcs, ellipses, text strings, and imported bitmaps, each with configurable colors, line styles, arrow heads, and area fills. Files begin with a header line declaring the format version (currently 3.2), followed by a resolution specification and the object definitions. One advantage is exceptional simplicity — the entirely text-based format is trivially parsed, generated, and manipulated by scripts, making FIG popular as an intermediate format in automated diagram generation pipelines. The rich ecosystem of conversion tools is another strength: fig2dev exports FIG files to dozens of output formats including EPS, PDF, SVG, LaTeX picture environments, PSTricks, and TikZ. This made Xfig and FIG especially popular in academic and scientific communities, where authors generate publication-quality figures that integrate seamlessly with LaTeX documents. While graphical tools have evolved since the 1980s, FIG remains in use among researchers who value its scriptability, LaTeX integration, and well-documented format stability.
Initial release: 1985
VIPS is the native file format of the libvips image processing library, originally developed by John Cupitt and Kirk Martinez at the National Gallery in London during the VASARI project (1989-1993) for high-resolution digitization and analysis of paintings. The VIPS format stores large images in a simple, memory-mappable layout: a header containing image dimensions, number of bands (channels), data type (8/16/32-bit integer, float, double, complex), color interpretation, resolution, and offset metadata, followed by the raw pixel data in band-interleaved format. This straightforward layout allows the operating system's virtual memory manager to map the file directly into address space, enabling libvips to process images much larger than available RAM by paging portions in and out as needed — a technique called demand-driven evaluation. VIPS files support images with any number of bands at any of the supported numeric types, accommodating everything from standard RGB photographs to hyperspectral datasets with hundreds of bands. One advantage is large-image performance: libvips's architecture processes images in small tiles evaluated on demand, meaning a 100,000 x 100,000 pixel image can be cropped, resized, sharpened, and saved without loading the entire image into memory — a capability that makes VIPS the engine behind image processing services handling millions of web images. The format's scientific heritage is another strength — the VASARI project required analyzing paintings at ultra-high resolution with multispectral imaging, and the VIPS format's support for arbitrary band counts and floating-point precision reflects these computational imaging origins. VIPS files are primarily used with the libvips library (available for C, Python, Ruby, and other languages) and can be converted to other formats via vips command-line tools or ImageMagick.
Initial release: 1993

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert FIG to VIPS?

Need to include an Xfig drawing in a report? Converting FIG to VIPS produces an image that any application can display.

Which tools support VIPS files?

You can open VIPS files with the libvips image processing library, Nip2 GUI, and pipelines built on the VIPS framework.

Can I use this converter on any operating system?

The tool is browser-based and works on Windows, macOS, Linux, ChromeOS, and mobile platforms — no OS-specific software needed.

Is registration required for FIG to VIPS?

No signup needed. Visit the page, upload your FIG file, convert to VIPS, and download without creating an account.

Can I batch convert multiple FIG files to VIPS?

Absolutely. Add several FIG files at once and convert them all to VIPS in a single batch — saves time on bulk tasks.

What happens to my file after conversion?

Your uploaded FIG file and the resulting VIPS output are automatically deleted from the server within 24 hours to protect your data.