RGBA to TCR Converter

Turn RGBA into TCR ebooks online for free

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Quality Preserved

Your original RGBA visual data transfers cleanly to TCR format. The converter maps pixel content accurately without unnecessary loss.

Easy to Use

Converting RGBA to TCR takes just a few clicks. The clean interface guides you through uploading, choosing output, and downloading.

Data Protection

Your uploaded RGBA data is deleted right after conversion, and the TCR output is removed from servers within 24 hours — keeping your content private.

How to convert RGBA to TCR

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

RGBA is a raw (headerless) image format that extends the RGB color model with a fourth channel for alpha transparency. Each pixel is stored as four consecutive sample values — red, green, blue, and alpha — written sequentially in scanline order with no container structure, headers, or compression. The alpha channel specifies opacity for each pixel independently: a maximum value means fully opaque, zero means fully transparent, and intermediate values produce semi-transparency. Like its three-channel counterpart, RGBA files require the image dimensions and bit depth to be specified externally since the raw data stream contains no metadata. The format supports 8-bit (four bytes per pixel, 32-bit total), 16-bit, and floating-point channel depths. In compositing workflows, the alpha channel enables layering operations where foreground elements are blended over backgrounds according to their per-pixel opacity — the mathematical foundation for all modern image compositing, described by Porter and Duff in their seminal 1984 paper on digital compositing. One advantage is direct framebuffer compatibility: modern GPU hardware natively processes 32-bit RGBA pixels, so raw RGBA data can be uploaded to texture memory or written from render targets without any format conversion, critical for real-time graphics applications and game engines. The format's simplicity in representing transparent images provides another practical benefit — scientific visualization, medical imaging, and overlay rendering can produce raw RGBA output that any downstream tool can consume without needing a common container format. RGBA files are handled by ImageMagick, FFmpeg, and various graphics and compositing tools.
Initial release: 1990
TCR (Text Compression for Reader) is a compressed plain-text ebook format developed by Barry Childress in the early 1990s for the Psion Series 3 family of palmtop computers. The format was created for Childress's Reader3 application, a text file viewer that needed to fit large books into the Psion's extremely limited storage — typically 128 KB to 2 MB of available memory. TCR uses a dictionary-based compression scheme derived from the earlier ZVR format by Ian Giddings, replacing repeated byte sequences with single-byte tokens that reference a header dictionary. This straightforward approach achieves compression ratios of roughly 40-60% on typical English prose while requiring minimal CPU resources for decompression. The Psion Series 3 ran on a 3.84 MHz NEC V30 processor with no floating-point unit, so TCR's low computational overhead was essential for smooth page-by-page reading. A key advantage is remarkable storage efficiency for its simplicity — users could carry dozens of novels on removable SSD cards that held only a few hundred kilobytes. The format found a dedicated user community among Psion enthusiasts who built libraries of compressed literature for portable reading years before smartphones existed. Though the Psion platform faded from the market in the early 2000s, TCR files can still be opened and converted by modern ebook tools, and the format stands as an early example of purpose-built mobile reading technology from the pre-smartphone era.
Developer: Barry Childress
Initial release: 1993

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert RGBA to TCR?

RGBA stores unstructured pixel values that most programs cannot interpret. Converting to TCR packages the data into a format anyone can open.

What programs open TCR files?

TCR files can be opened in Psion devices, Calibre, CoolReader, and legacy PDA ebook applications.

Why choose TCR format?

TCR offers compressed text, Psion format, legacy. Converting RGBA content into TCR makes it ready for e-readers and digital distribution.

Does this work on Mac and Linux?

Convertio is entirely browser-based, so it works on macOS, Linux, Windows, and even mobile platforms without any software installation.

Will my image quality survive the conversion?

Your original RGBA pixel data is converted accurately to TCR. The output quality matches what the TCR format supports — no unnecessary degradation.