XLS to PAM Converter

Save XLS spreadsheets as PAM portable images online

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Versatile Portable Format

PAM handles color, grayscale, and transparency — convert your XLS into the most flexible Netpbm image format available.

Processed Remotely

Our servers convert XLS to PAM without any load on your device. Just upload and download.

Data Privacy

XLS uploads are deleted immediately. PAM results are purged from servers within 24 hours.

How to convert XLS to PAM

1

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

2

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

3

Let the file convert and you can download your pam 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
PAM (Portable Arbitrary Map) is a raster image format added to the Netpbm family around the year 2000 by Bryan Henderson, the maintainer of Netpbm, as a generalization that unifies and extends the original PBM, PGM, and PPM formats. Where the classic Netpbm formats each handle a specific image type (PBM for bilevel, PGM for grayscale, PPM for color), PAM provides a single format that can represent any combination of channels, bit depths, and image types through a flexible ASCII header. The PAM header uses keyword-value pairs: WIDTH, HEIGHT, DEPTH (number of channels), MAXVAL (maximum sample value, up to 65535), and TUPLTYPE (a string identifying the image type — BLACKANDWHITE, GRAYSCALE, RGB, GRAYSCALE_ALPHA, RGB_ALPHA, or custom types). After the header, pixel data is stored in binary, with each sample occupying one or two bytes depending on MAXVAL. PAM's key innovation over its predecessors is native alpha channel support: GRAYSCALE_ALPHA (2-channel) and RGB_ALPHA (4-channel) tupletypes provide transparency without requiring a separate mask file, something the original PBM/PGM/PPM formats could not express. One advantage is format unification: a single PAM-reading implementation handles monochrome, grayscale, color, and alpha-augmented images, eliminating the need for separate parsers for each Netpbm variant. The extensible TUPLTYPE mechanism provides another practical strength — custom channel configurations (multispectral, depth + color, or any application-specific arrangement) can be represented and labeled without modifying the format specification. PAM is supported by Netpbm tools, ImageMagick, GIMP, and programming libraries that process the Netpbm family.
Initial release: 2000

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert XLS to PAM?

PAM is the most flexible Netpbm format — supports color, grayscale, and alpha channels for maximum portability across imaging tools.

What opens PAM files?

GIMP, ImageMagick, Netpbm toolkit, IrfanView, and most Unix imaging tools handle PAM files without issues.

How does PAM differ from PBM/PGM/PPM?

PAM is the unified successor to PBM, PGM, and PPM — it supports all pixel types plus alpha in a single, modern format.

Is the conversion free?

Yes — free XLS to PAM conversion on convertio.tools. Premium tiers add batch features and higher limits.

Can I convert multiple files?

Upload several XLS files and convert them all to PAM in one batch session.