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SIX to SXW Converter

Convert terminal graphics to SXW documents online for free

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Browser-Based Tool

No downloads or plugins needed — convert SIX to SXW directly in your web browser on any operating system or device.

Retro Graphics Export

SIX encodes images for vintage DEC terminals. Converting to SXW extracts that artwork into a format modern tools understand.

Any Device Works

Convert SIX to SXW from a desktop, laptop, tablet, or phone. Any device with a modern browser and internet connection works.

How to convert SIX to SXW

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

SIX is a file extension for SIXEL (Six Pixel) graphics data, a bitmap graphics format developed by Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) in 1983 and introduced with the LA50 dot matrix printer. SIXEL encodes images as a sequence of printable ASCII characters, where each character represents a column of six vertical pixels (a 'sixel') — the character's ASCII value minus 63 provides a 6-bit binary pattern, with each bit controlling one pixel in the vertical column. The encoding is structured as a series of sixel bands (each six pixels tall) across the image width, with control sequences for color selection (up to 256 registers with HLS or RGB specification), repeat counts (run-length encoding for efficiency), carriage return, and newline commands. SIXEL data is transmitted to the output device using DEC's standard escape sequence protocol, embedded within the text stream alongside regular character output. Originally designed for DEC's line of printers and later supported by DEC VT-series terminals (VT240, VT330, VT340), SIXEL has experienced a remarkable revival in modern terminal emulator software. One advantage is terminal-native image display: SIXEL allows images to be rendered directly within a text terminal session without requiring a graphical window system, enabling command-line tools to display graphs, photographs, and previews inline with text output. This capability has driven adoption in modern terminals like mlterm, xterm, WezTerm, and foot. SIX/SIXEL data can be generated by ImageMagick, libsixel, and chafa, and viewed in any SIXEL-capable terminal emulator.
Initial release: 1983
SXW is the word processing document format used by StarOffice 6.0 and OpenOffice.org 1.0, developed by Sun Microsystems and released in 2002. The format was one of the first mainstream office document formats to adopt an XML-based architecture, packaging document content, styles, metadata, and embedded media in a ZIP archive — a structural approach that directly influenced the later OpenDocument Format (ODF). The content.xml file describes the document body using XML elements for paragraphs, headings, lists, tables, footnotes, and inline formatting, while styles.xml defines the styling rules and meta.xml carries document properties. SXW represented a significant milestone in open-source office software, demonstrating that a non-proprietary XML format could handle the full range of word processing features including change tracking, indexes, cross-references, and complex page layouts. One advantage was transparency and openness — the XML structure made document content inspectable, transformable, and processable using standard tools, a sharp contrast to the opaque binary formats dominant at the time. The format's role as a technological precursor to the ODF standard is another historical significance: the OASIS OpenDocument Technical Committee used the OpenOffice.org XML format (including SXW) as the starting point for developing ODF 1.0. While SXW was superseded by ODT with OpenOffice.org 2.0 in 2005, existing SXW documents can be opened by LibreOffice, Apache OpenOffice, and document conversion tools.
Developer: Sun Microsystems
Initial release: 2002

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert SIX to SXW?

SIX encodes images as text for DEC terminals — useless outside that environment. Converting to SXW yields a standard image you can use anywhere.

What programs can open SXW?

LibreOffice Writer and Apache OpenOffice open SXW files natively — it is their predecessor format from StarOffice days.

Will I lose image quality converting SIX to SXW?

Since SXW supports lossless storage, the pixel data carries over without degradation. The result faithfully represents the source SIX image.

Is SIX to SXW conversion fast?

Conversion is handled on cloud servers and usually completes in a few seconds. Larger or higher-resolution SIX images may take slightly longer.

Does Convertio support batch SIX to SXW conversion?

Batch conversion is supported. Queue as many SIX files as you need and convert them all to SXW in a single run — no repeating steps manually.

Is SIX the same as SIXEL?

Yes — SIX is the short-form extension for SIXEL graphics. Both refer to the same DEC terminal image encoding and work identically here.