RGF to PCT Converter

Change RGF images to PCT format online

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Pixel-Perfect Output

Image data from your RGF file transfers to PCT with maximum accuracy. The converter prioritizes faithful reproduction of the source.

Remote Processing

Your device stays responsive while RGF files convert to PCT on dedicated cloud servers. All processing happens remotely.

Speedy Conversion

No long waits — RGF to PCT processing is optimized for speed. Your converted file is typically ready in just a few seconds.

How to convert RGF to PCT

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

RGF (Robot Graphics Format) is a simple monochrome bitmap image format used by LEGO Mindstorms EV3 programmable robotics kits, introduced with the EV3 system on September 1, 2013. RGF files store 1-bit (black and white) images designed for display on the EV3 Intelligent Brick's 178x128 pixel monochrome LCD screen. The format uses a minimal structure: a header containing the image width and height as binary values, followed by the pixel data where each bit represents one pixel (1 for black, 0 for white), packed eight per byte in row-major order. RGF images are used as custom display graphics in EV3 programs — students and hobbyists create them for robot status displays, user interfaces, splash screens, and animation frames shown on the brick's screen during program execution. The images are typically designed using LEGO's EV3 software (which includes a built-in image editor) or converted from other formats using community tools. RGF fits within LEGO's broader educational robotics platform, where the Mindstorms system teaches programming, engineering, and computational thinking to students worldwide. One advantage is the format's role in educational technology: RGF provides a simple, concrete example of how digital images are represented as binary data — a concept that students working with Mindstorms can directly observe by examining the file contents and seeing the corresponding image on the brick's screen. The format's simplicity makes it accessible for young programmers learning about file formats and binary data. RGF files can be created and converted using ImageMagick, the EV3 development environment, and community tools like ev3dev.
Developer: The LEGO Group
Initial release: 2013
PCT (also known as PICT) is a metafile graphics format originally developed by Apple Computer and introduced alongside the original Macintosh in January 1984. PCT files can contain both vector drawing commands and raster bitmap data, encoded as a sequence of QuickDraw drawing operations — the same graphics primitives used by the Macintosh operating system for all on-screen rendering. The format evolved through two major versions: PICT 1, which recorded basic QuickDraw operations (lines, rectangles, ovals, text, 1-bit bitmaps) in a compact format suitable for the original Macintosh's limited memory, and PICT 2, introduced with Color QuickDraw in 1987, which extended the format to support 24-bit color, multiple color spaces, and embedded JPEG-compressed data. PCT files begin with a 512-byte header (originally used for resource fork information), followed by the picture size, bounding rectangle, and a sequence of opcodes that define the drawing operations. During the Macintosh's commercial ascendancy, PICT was the universal graphics interchange format on Mac OS — the system clipboard used PICT for all graphical copy/paste operations, and most Mac applications could import and export the format. One advantage is the hybrid vector/raster nature: PCT files from the QuickDraw era preserve both scalable drawing commands and pixel data in a single format, enabling resolution-independent output for the vector portions. PICT's historical significance as the native Mac graphics format throughout the classic Mac OS era (1984-2001) provides another dimension. PCT files remain readable by Preview on macOS, ImageMagick, XnView, LibreOffice, and GIMP.
Developer: Apple Computer
Initial release: 1984

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert RGF to PCT?

Converting RGF to PCT lets you extract tiny robot display graphics into viewable images — PCT works in virtually any image viewer or web browser available today.

What programs open PCT files?

You can open PCT files with any standard image viewer. Windows Photo Viewer, macOS Preview, GIMP, and web browsers all support PCT.

Where do RGF files come from?

RGF files come from LEGO Mindstorms robotics kits. They store tiny monochrome graphics meant for the programmable brick's small LCD screen.

What happens to uploaded files?

Your RGF files are processed on secure servers, then deleted automatically. Converted PCT files are available for 24 hours, then erased.

Does converting RGF to PCT lose quality?

Conversion preserves the quality present in the RGF original. Any limitations come from the source resolution, not from the conversion step.