TXT carries no layout information of its own. Converting to Word adds page margins, default fonts and document chrome. This guide explains how to convert TXT to Word with Word.to — what the conversion really does, when it is the right call, and what to watch for at each step.
بدلوي TXT ته Word →Common reasons: producing a printable copy of plain notes, turning a README or technical write-up into a polished document, or wrapping source text in a format that supports page numbers and a table of contents.
The tradeoff: Word adds visual structure that TXT did not carry. Page size, default font and margins all become concrete choices. The text itself survives intact.
The conversion wraps the TXT text in Word document structure: page size, default font, margins. Plain TXT has no structural markup, so the converter cannot infer headings, lists or tables — it ships the characters as flowing body text.
Open the TXT to Word tool. The page accepts files from your computer or by drag-and-drop.
Select your TXT file or drag it onto the upload area. TXT is typically used for plain text without any formatting — notes, logs, source data, license files.
Most TXT-to-Word jobs work at default settings. If you have a specific destination requirement, tune the options on the converter page.
Run the conversion. The tool reads the TXT, rewrites the content for Word, and produces the result.
Save the Word file. Open it in Microsoft Word, Google Docs, LibreOffice, Pages.