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PGX to OXPS Converter

Export PGX images as OXPS documents — free

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One-Click Retrieval

Download your OXPS result as soon as the conversion ends. The output stays available for a full day if you need to grab it later.

Quick Turnaround

The converter processes PGX images rapidly. Most PGX to OXPS conversions finish within moments of starting.

Private and Secure

Your PGX files are deleted right after conversion, and OXPS outputs are erased within 24 hours. Your data remains entirely confidential.

How to convert PGX to OXPS

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

PGX is a simple single-component raster image format defined as part of the JPEG 2000 standard (ISO/IEC 15444) for use in conformance testing and verification of JPEG 2000 codec implementations. Introduced around 2000 alongside the JPEG 2000 specification itself, PGX files store a single image component (one color channel or grayscale plane) with a text header followed by raw pixel data, providing an unambiguous reference representation against which encoder and decoder outputs can be compared sample by sample. The header is a single ASCII line specifying endianness (ML for big-endian, LM for little-endian), signedness (+ for unsigned, - for signed), bit depth (1 to 32 bits), width, and height. The pixel data follows as raw binary values, each occupying the minimum number of bytes needed for the specified bit depth, with one value per pixel. For multi-component images (like RGB), each component is stored in a separate PGX file. The format's deliberate simplicity — no compression, no metadata, no multi-channel support — ensures there are no ambiguities in interpretation that could mask codec bugs. One advantage is verification precision: PGX's uncompressed, exactly-specified representation allows bit-exact comparison of decoded JPEG 2000 output against reference images, essential for certifying that a codec implementation conforms to the standard. The format's role in the JPEG 2000 conformance testing framework means it is implemented by every serious JPEG 2000 codec (OpenJPEG, Kakadu, etc.) and used in the official ISO conformance test suite. PGX files can also be processed by ImageMagick and various JPEG 2000 development tools.
Initial release: 2000
OXPS (Open XPS) is a fixed-layout document format standardized as ECMA-388 in June 2009, representing an evolution of Microsoft's original XPS specification. The format packages fixed-layout pages, fonts, images, and metadata in a ZIP-based Open Packaging Conventions container — the same packaging framework used by DOCX, XLSX, and other Office Open XML formats. Each page is described using an XML markup language that specifies paths, glyphs, images, and canvas elements with precise coordinates, producing documents that render identically regardless of the viewing device or printer. OXPS incorporated several changes from the original XPS: the use of JPEG XR for high dynamic range images, support for the Open Packaging Conventions 2nd edition, and alignment with the Ecma standardization process. Windows 8 and later generate OXPS (rather than XPS) when printing to the Microsoft XPS Document Writer. One advantage is standards-based document fidelity — as an Ecma standard, OXPS provides a vendor-neutral, fully specified format for documents that must look identical everywhere they are rendered, essential for legal filings, regulatory submissions, and archival records. The fixed-layout model is another strength: unlike reflowable formats, OXPS documents preserve exact page composition including precise glyph positioning and vector graphics. Built-in support in Windows and the .NET framework provides native viewing and creation capabilities without third-party software.
Developer: Ecma International
Initial release: June 2009

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert PGX to OXPS?

Placing PGX images into OXPS format lets recipients view them in standard document readers — far more accessible than raw PGX files.

What programs open OXPS files?

Standard document viewers handle OXPS files — Microsoft Office, LibreOffice, Adobe Reader, or Calibre for e-book formats.

What makes PGX files different?

PGX is a deliberately simple, single-component raw image format. Its sole purpose is providing unambiguous test data for JPEG 2000 compliance.

How is image quality handled during conversion?

The converter extracts full image data from PGX and encodes it into OXPS at the highest quality the target format allows. No unnecessary loss.

Do I need to install anything?

No installation needed — the conversion happens entirely online. Open the converter in any modern web browser and your device handles the rest.