Free online File conversion
How to convert your TIFF to DXF online?
FQA
TRY MORE
Latest articles
Tag Image File Format (TIFF) is a flexible bitmap format primarily used to store images including photographs and art drawings, originally developed by Aldus Corporation in conjunction with Microsoft Corporation for PostScript printing. TIFF, along with JPEG and PNG, became a popular high-bit color image format. The TIFF format is widely supported in the industry, such as Adobe's Photoshop, The GIMP Team's GIMP, image processing applications such as Ulead PhotoImpact and Paint Shop Pro, desktop printing and page layout applications such as QuarkXPress and Adobe InDesign, scanning, fax, Word processing, Optical Character Recognition and other applications support this format. Adobe, which obtained the PageMaker printing application from Aldus, controls the TIFF specification.
DXF (Drawing Exchange Format) is an electronic drawing file format originally developed by AutoCAD and widely used. It is used to exchange and share 2D and 3D graphic data between different CAD (Computer Aided Design) software.
DXF files are in plain text format, which is readable and editable. It can store various types of graphic entities, such as points, lines, circles, polylines, polygons, arcs, text, and so on. In addition, DXF also supports storing metadata information such as layers, colors, linetypes, fonts, sizes, block definitions, and block references.
Due to DXF being an open file format, many CAD software supports importing and exporting DXF files. This enables the exchange of drawing data between different CAD software, facilitating collaboration and collaborative work between designers and engineers.
In DXF files, graphic data is saved in ASCII format and can be viewed and modified using a text editor. The structure of DXF files is clear and easy to parse and process. It is widely used in fields such as mechanical design, architectural design, and circuit design, becoming a universal data exchange standard between CAD software.