Convert anything, at global scale.
200+ formats and automation APIs that feels instant.
CONVERT
From
To
Drop files or choose a source
Upload multiple files at once, mix formats, and fine-tune every conversion with format-aware settings.
Max 2GB per file · Drag & drop ready · Mixed file types welcome
AsciiDoc at a glance
AsciiDoc
AsciiDoc began with Stuart Rackham's early-2000s toolchain and later gained broader ecosystem momentum through Asciidoctor and the ongoing Eclipse-led specification effort.
DOT at a glance
DOT
DOT belongs to the classic binary Office period when document templates were central to controlling letterheads, forms, internal reports, and standardized authoring behavior.
Format comparison
| Feature | AsciiDoc | DOT |
|---|---|---|
| File type | Document | Document |
| Extensions |
|
|
| MIME type |
|
|
| Compression / quality | depends | depends |
| File size characteristics | medium | medium |
| Compatibility | broad | broad |
| Editability | moderate | moderate |
| Created year | 2002 | 1989 |
| Inventor | Stuart Rackham | Microsoft |
| Status | active | active |
| Primary use cases |
|
|
| Common software |
|
|
| Archival suitability | strong | strong |
| Metadata handling | moderate | moderate |
| Delivery profile | strong | strong |
| Workflow fit | exchange | exchange |
| Vector scaling | Not supported | Not supported |
| Reflowable text | Not supported | Not supported |
| Structured data | Not supported | Supported |
When to use each format
When to use AsciiDoc
- authoring
- review and collaboration
- distribution
- Balances source readability with richer semantics than basic Markdown variants.
When to use DOT
- authoring
- review and collaboration
- distribution
- Historically valuable for repeatable document authoring.
FAQs
Why convert AsciiDoc to DOT?
Choose DOT as target when the destination requires a classic Word template rather than a normal document, especially in environments that still generate files from legacy template libraries.
What changes when converting AsciiDoc to DOT?
Convert to DOT when the destination requires a classic Word template rather than a normal document, especially in environments that still generate files from legacy template libraries. It is useful for preserving institutional forms, old stationery templates, and inherited document-assembly assets. For modern Word template workflows, DOTX or DOTM are usually preferable.
What should I review after converting AsciiDoc to DOT?
After conversion, review these destination checks: Open converted output in Microsoft Word and verify behavior on real samples; Compare output against the expected depends quality profile; Binary legacy internals make it a weak modern default.
How can I keep quality stable in AsciiDoc to DOT conversion?
Run representative samples, keep settings deterministic, and monitor these risks: Template behavior is less transparent and portable than in newer OOXML-era formats; Binary legacy internals make it a weak modern default; Validate destination compatibility before large-batch conversion.