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PCX image converter

Upload image (max 15 MB)

About PCX (.pcx)

PCX (PiCture eXchange) uses a 128-byte header followed by RLE-packed image data. Early modes are palette-based; later PCX writers added 24-bit truecolor scanlines. The format was ubiquitous on DOS and early Windows systems.

PCX does not define a rich color-management pipeline; EGA/VGA palette assumptions appear in older files. Fax-style and scanner archives sometimes mix line art and halftone regions—heavy lossy recompression of palette line art introduces speckle around edges. PCX is now chiefly of historical interest for migration and preservation.

How to use

  1. From this hub, open “Any supported format” for the full picker, or pick a page such as “PNG image converter” for a focused SEO entry.
  2. On any child page, upload an image, choose the target format, then download the converted file.
  3. Watch transparency support because formats like JPG do not preserve alpha channels.
  4. Verify metadata, color profile, and visual output in your target app or browser.

FAQ

What is image converter used for?

Image Converter changes image file types to match compatibility and performance goals.

Is my data uploaded?

No. Processing runs locally in your browser.

Will conversion affect quality?

Lossy formats can reduce quality, so pick format and settings based on use case.

Introduction

The Image Converter hub lists a universal converter plus one landing page per supported input extension (for example PNG or WebP). Each child page uses the same in-browser engine; format-specific intros are generated in TypeScript and prepended to this shared article.

What is image converter?

Image converter changes an image from one codec container to another, such as PNG to JPG or WebP.

Each format has trade-offs in transparency, compression, and compatibility.

Conversion should be chosen based on target environment, not only file size.

Key Features

Multi-format conversion supports diverse publishing workflows.

Fast browser-side processing shortens asset preparation time.

Predictable output helps maintain consistent delivery pipelines.

Common Use Cases

  • Converting design exports to web-friendly formats.
  • Preparing images for CMS systems with strict accepted types.
  • Creating fallback assets for browsers with limited format support.

Best Practices

  • Preserve alpha-aware formats when transparent backgrounds are needed.
  • Test converted assets in real UI contexts before bulk rollout.
  • Keep master originals in a lossless format for future edits.