XLS to MAP Converter

Export XLS spreadsheet data to MAP image format

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Specialized Output

Transform your XLS data into a MAP colormap image for use in systems that require this specific format input.

Quick Processing

Cloud servers convert your XLS to MAP in seconds. No local imaging tools needed.

Private Processing

XLS uploads are erased immediately. MAP results are deleted within 24 hours.

How to convert XLS to MAP

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

XLS is the binary spreadsheet format of Microsoft Excel, first introduced with Excel 1.0 for Macintosh in September 1985 and becoming the dominant spreadsheet format worldwide. The format stores workbooks as OLE2 compound document files using the Binary Interchange File Format (BIFF), organizing sheets, cells, formulas, formatting, charts, pivot tables, macros, and metadata across multiple internal streams. Each cell record encodes the cell's value (number, string, boolean, error, or formula), position, and formatting index, while shared string tables and style records reduce redundancy. The format evolved through BIFF versions (BIFF2 through BIFF8), with BIFF8 (Excel 97) establishing the structure used through Excel 2003. XLS supports up to 65,536 rows and 256 columns per sheet, a limit that drove the creation of XLSX. One advantage is universal spreadsheet compatibility — XLS files are recognized by every major spreadsheet application including LibreOffice Calc, Google Sheets, Apple Numbers, and dozens of programming libraries across all platforms. The format's mature feature set is another strength: XLS handles complex formulas, conditional formatting, data validation, named ranges, array formulas, external references, and VBA macros. Although XLSX replaced XLS as the default in Office 2007, the binary format persists in financial institutions, legacy reporting systems, and any environment where Excel 97-2003 compatibility is required.
Developer: Microsoft
Initial release: September 1985
MAP is an internal raster image format used by ImageMagick, the open-source image processing suite first released by John Cristy at DuPont on August 1, 1990. MAP files store indexed-color (color-mapped) images in ImageMagick's native representation: a color palette (the map) followed by pixel data where each pixel is an index into that palette rather than a direct RGB value. The format provides a compact representation for images with a limited number of distinct colors — each pixel requires only enough bits to index the palette (typically 8 bits for up to 256 colors), compared to the 24 or 32 bits per pixel required by full-color formats. MAP serves primarily as an intermediate format within ImageMagick's processing pipeline, useful when performing operations that benefit from or require palettized representation: color quantization (reducing an image to a specific number of colors), palette manipulation, GIF preparation, and indexed-color analysis. The format is invoked through ImageMagick's standard I/O syntax and can be piped between processing stages without disk overhead. One advantage is direct access to ImageMagick's color quantization and palette management capabilities: MAP format output makes the palette structure explicit and manipulable, enabling workflows where specific palette operations (reordering, remapping, merging) need to be performed between processing steps. The format's integration into the ImageMagick processing ecosystem is another practical strength — any of ImageMagick's extensive image manipulation operations can consume or produce MAP format data, making it a natural intermediate for color-reduction pipelines that ultimately target GIF, PNG with palette, or other indexed-color formats.
Initial release: 1990

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert XLS to MAP?

MAP is a colormap image format — converting from XLS creates an image compatible with applications that use MAP as their image input.

What opens MAP files?

ImageMagick and certain specialized imaging tools can process MAP format files on various operating systems.

Is MAP a common image format?

MAP is niche and rarely used outside specific toolchains. For general image needs, PNG or JPEG are far more practical.

Is it free?

Yes — XLS to MAP conversion is free on convertio.tools. Premium accounts offer batch processing and extended limits.

Can I convert several files?

Upload multiple XLS spreadsheets and convert them all to MAP in one batch session on convertio.tools.

XLS to MAP Quality Rating

4.5 (8 votes)
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