MAP to WMF Converter

Online MAP to WMF conversion — fast results

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Cross-Platform

The converter works on Windows, macOS, Linux, iOS, and Android. Convert MAP to WMF from whichever device you have at hand.

Quality Preserved

The converter extracts the best visual data from your MAP source. The resulting WMF output maintains the quality your original data supports.

Universal Access

Convert niche MAP data into standard WMF that opens on any device. Bridge the gap between specialized and mainstream formats effortlessly.

How to convert MAP to WMF

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

MAP is an internal raster image format used by ImageMagick, the open-source image processing suite first released by John Cristy at DuPont on August 1, 1990. MAP files store indexed-color (color-mapped) images in ImageMagick's native representation: a color palette (the map) followed by pixel data where each pixel is an index into that palette rather than a direct RGB value. The format provides a compact representation for images with a limited number of distinct colors — each pixel requires only enough bits to index the palette (typically 8 bits for up to 256 colors), compared to the 24 or 32 bits per pixel required by full-color formats. MAP serves primarily as an intermediate format within ImageMagick's processing pipeline, useful when performing operations that benefit from or require palettized representation: color quantization (reducing an image to a specific number of colors), palette manipulation, GIF preparation, and indexed-color analysis. The format is invoked through ImageMagick's standard I/O syntax and can be piped between processing stages without disk overhead. One advantage is direct access to ImageMagick's color quantization and palette management capabilities: MAP format output makes the palette structure explicit and manipulable, enabling workflows where specific palette operations (reordering, remapping, merging) need to be performed between processing steps. The format's integration into the ImageMagick processing ecosystem is another practical strength — any of ImageMagick's extensive image manipulation operations can consume or produce MAP format data, making it a natural intermediate for color-reduction pipelines that ultimately target GIF, PNG with palette, or other indexed-color formats.
Initial release: 1990
WMF (Windows Metafile) is a vector graphics format created by Microsoft, introduced with Windows 3.0 in May 1990 as the platform's native format for recording and replaying graphical operations. A WMF file captures a sequence of GDI (Graphics Device Interface) drawing commands — lines, rectangles, ellipses, polygons, text, and bitmap blits — in the order they were issued, serializing screen or printer output into a replayable file. The format uses a 16-bit coordinate space and organizes records as a linear stream of function calls with their parameters, preceded by a header specifying the bounding rectangle and resolution. WMF became deeply integrated into the Windows ecosystem as the default format for clip art collections, Office document graphics, and clipboard vector interchange during the 1990s — Microsoft Office shipped with thousands of WMF clip art images that defined a visual era of desktop publishing. One advantage is pervasive compatibility: virtually every Windows application from the past three decades can render WMF content, making it one of the most widely supported vector formats in existence. The lightweight recording model is another strength — WMF files are compact and render quickly because they replay native system drawing calls rather than interpreting a complex graphics language. While 16-bit limitations and lack of transparency and Bezier curves led Microsoft to develop EMF as a 32-bit replacement, WMF files remain ubiquitous in legacy documents and across current Windows software.
Developer: Microsoft
Initial release: May 22, 1990

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert MAP to WMF?

MAP requires niche software to open. Converting to WMF lets you share and view your color maps on virtually any platform.

What programs open WMF?

Open WMF in Illustrator, Inkscape, CorelDRAW, or Affinity Designer. For viewing, many image viewers handle this format.

What is the MAP format?

MAP is used in image processing and color palette management. It stores color lookup tables and image processing pipelines — converting to WMF makes this data universally accessible.

How long does the conversion take?

Most MAP to WMF conversions finish within seconds. Larger or more complex images may take slightly longer depending on the data size.

Can I batch convert MAP to WMF?

Yes — Convertio supports batch uploads. Add multiple MAP images and convert them all to WMF at once to speed up your workflow.

Does this work on mobile devices?

Yes — the converter runs in any web browser, so it works on phones, tablets, laptops, and desktops regardless of operating system.