Free plan: 1 faʻaiuga / itula, 1 faila i le taimi
E le faʻatapulaʻaina →

FaʻAvasega PNG i DOCX

FaʻAtulagaga PNG i DOCX Faʻatonu faila ma le faigofie

Filifili au faila

*Ua tapeina faila pe a mavae le 24 itula

Liliu e oo atu i le 1 GB faila e aunoa ma se totogi, e mafai e tagata faʻaoga Pro ona liliu e oo atu i le 100 GB faila; Saini nei lava

La'uina i luga

0%

Auala e faaliliu ai PNG i DOCX

Laasaga 1: Lafo i luga lau PNG faila e faʻaaoga ai le faʻamau o loʻo i luga pe e ala i le toso ma faʻapaʻu.

Laasaga 2: Kiliki le faamau 'Liliu' e amata ai le liua.

Laasaga 3: La'u mai lau faila ua liua DOCX faila


PNG i DOCX Faʻamatalaga Faʻamatalaga

How do I turn a PNG into an editable DOCX document?
+
Upload the PNG and the converter extracts its text — running OCR (optical character recognition) when the PNG is a scan or image, or pulling the text layer directly when the PNG already contains real text — then rebuilds it as an editable DOCX you can open and change in Word, Google Docs, or LibreOffice.
Yes — when the PNG is a scanned image or an image-only PDF, the converter runs OCR to recognize the characters and produce real, selectable text in the DOCX. When the PNG already has a digital text layer, it skips OCR and copies the text directly, which is faster and 100% accurate.
For clean, high-resolution scans of printed text, OCR accuracy is typically 98-99%+. Accuracy drops on low-DPI scans, skewed pages, handwriting, or unusual fonts. For best results scan the PNG at 300 DPI or higher and keep pages straight; the converter auto-deskews and de-noises before recognition.
The converter reconstructs reading order, paragraphs, and headings in the DOCX, and preserves simple column and table structure. Heavily-designed layouts (magazine spreads, complex forms) are simplified to a clean editable flow — the priority is accurate, editable text over pixel-perfect layout reproduction.
OCR recognizes 100+ languages including Latin, Cyrillic, Greek, Arabic, Hebrew, and CJK (Chinese/Japanese/Korean) scripts, and auto-detects the language of the PNG. Mixed-language pages are handled too. The recognized text lands in the DOCX in the correct script, ready to edit.
Yes — a multi-page PNG (PDF or multi-page TIFF) is processed page by page and assembled into a single continuous DOCX document with the pages in order. Page breaks from the PNG are preserved as section breaks in the DOCX so the structure stays clear.
The converter detects ruled tables in the PNG and reconstructs them as real editable DOCX tables where possible. Borderless or visually-implied tables are harder to detect and may come through as tab-aligned text — check and adjust table boundaries in your editor after conversion.
Text-layer extraction (no OCR needed) is near-instant. OCR is slower — roughly 1-3 seconds per page depending on resolution and language. A 50-page scanned PNG typically finishes in under two minutes; Premium runs more parallel OCR workers for large batches.
Yes — uploaded PNG files and the recognized text are processed in isolated workers and deleted within minutes. We never read, store, or share the document contents. See /privacy/ for the retention window.
OCR errors almost always trace to source quality: low-DPI scans, JPEG compression artifacts, faint or photocopied text, skew, or decorative fonts. Re-scan the PNG at 300 DPI in grayscale, keep pages flat and straight, then re-run — recognition accuracy improves dramatically with a clean source.
Printed text recognizes reliably; handwriting recognition is far less accurate and works only for neat, separated print-style writing, not cursive. For handwritten PNG, expect to proofread the DOCX closely. Typed or printed source material is where OCR excels.
Yes — the whole point of converting PNG to an editable DOCX is that the output is real text, not an image: you can search it, select and copy it, spell-check it, and edit it freely. That is the difference between this and simply viewing the PNG as a picture.

PNG

E lagolagoina e faila PNG le manino ma faʻaaoga le faʻapipiʻiina e aunoa ma se leiloa, ma avea ai ma mea lelei mo ata, logos, ma screenshots.

DOCX

DOCX o le faʻatulagaga o le Word e faavae i le XML e ofaina ai faʻaputuga ma le lelei o le fesoʻotaʻiga.


Fa'avasega lenei meafaigaluega
5.0/5 - 0 palota
Pe tu'u au faila iinei