TCR to DJVU Converter

Convert TCR text to DJVU document format — free

Drop files here. 1 GB maximum file size or Sign Up
to
Facebook Amazon Microsoft Tesla Nestle Walmart L'Oreal

Compact Document Archive

TCR compressed text becomes a DJVU document — an ultra-efficient format designed for storing document images at remarkably small file sizes.

All Processing Online

Convertio converts your TCR to DJVU entirely in the cloud. No local software installation needed — just upload and download.

Read on Many Platforms

DJVU viewers exist for Windows, macOS, Linux, and mobile. Your converted TCR text becomes accessible across all major operating systems.

How to convert TCR to DJVU

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

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
DjVu (pronounced "deja vu") is a document format developed at AT&T Labs by Yann LeCun, Leon Bottou, Patrick Haffner, and Paul Howard, first released in 1996. The format was specifically designed for storing scanned documents and images at very high compression ratios while maintaining visual quality suitable for on-screen reading. DjVu achieves this through a layered approach: the document image is separated into a foreground layer (text and line art at full resolution), a background layer (photographs and textures at reduced resolution), and a mask layer that determines which layer is visible at each pixel. This separation, combined with purpose-built compression algorithms for each layer type, typically produces files 5-10 times smaller than equivalent JPEG or PDF scans. One advantage is exceptional compression on scanned pages — a 300 DPI color scan that might occupy 25 MB as TIFF or 500 KB as JPEG typically compresses to 40-80 KB in DjVu while preserving legible text. The progressive rendering model is another strength: DjVu files stream efficiently over networks, displaying a readable low-resolution version almost immediately while progressively refining to full quality. The format supports multi-page documents, embedded text layers for searchability, hyperlinks, annotations, and a shared dictionary mechanism that further compresses collections of similar pages. DjVu is widely used by libraries and archives for digitized historical documents and manuscripts.
Developer: AT&T Labs
Initial release: 1996

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert TCR to DJVU?

DJVU excels at storing scanned-document-style content with extreme compression. Converting TCR creates a compact, archival-grade document image.

What software reads DJVU files?

WinDjView on Windows, DjVuLibre on Linux, Okular on KDE, and various web-based viewers handle DJVU. Many e-readers also support it natively.

Is DJVU good for archiving?

Excellent. DJVU was designed for scanned documents and achieves very small file sizes while maintaining visual quality — ideal for long-term storage.

Can I search text in the DJVU output?

The conversion renders text as a document image. For searchable output, an OCR layer would need to be added separately after conversion.

Is there a cost to convert TCR to DJVU?

No, Convertio provides free TCR to DJVU conversion. Premium plans offer batch processing and extended upload limits.