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MD at a glance
MD
Markdown was created in 2004 by John Gruber with Aaron Swartz, but the later CommonMark effort became important because the original syntax description was too ambiguous to keep implementations aligned.
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 | MD | DOT |
|---|---|---|
| File type | Not available | Not available |
| Extensions |
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| MIME type |
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| Compression / quality | Not available | Not available |
| File size characteristics | Not available | Not available |
| Compatibility | Not available | Not available |
| Editability | Not available | Not available |
| Created year | Not available | Not available |
| Inventor | Not available | Not available |
| Status | Not available | Not available |
| Primary use cases |
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| Common software |
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| Archival suitability | Not available | Not available |
| Metadata handling | Not available | Not available |
| Delivery profile | Not available | Not available |
| Workflow fit | Not available | Not available |
| Vector scaling | Not available | Not available |
| Reflowable text | Not available | Not available |
| Structured data | Not available | Not available |
When to use each format
When to use MD
- authoring
- review and collaboration
- distribution
- Readable in raw plain text.
When to use DOT
- authoring
- review and collaboration
- distribution
- Historically valuable for repeatable document authoring.
FAQs
Why convert MD 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 MD 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 MD 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 MD 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.