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NanoMD at a glance
NanoMD
NanoMD represents the recurring tendency in documentation tooling to carve out restricted markdown subsets whenever implementers value deterministic parsing, low overhead, and minimal feature surfaces over full compatibility.
PTX at a glance
PTX
Digital photography fragmented into many manufacturer-specific raw formats because camera makers optimized for their own sensors, metadata, and software ecosystems rather than for one shared public raw standard.
Format comparison
| Feature | NanoMD | PTX |
|---|---|---|
| File type | Document | Image |
| Extensions |
|
|
| MIME type |
|
|
| Created year | 2020 | 2005 |
| Inventor | Community (Markdown variant) | Pentax (now Ricoh) |
| Status | active | proprietary |
| Primary use cases |
|
|
| Vector scaling | Not supported | Not supported |
When to use each format
When to use NanoMD
- Your source file is already in NanoMD.
- Preserve source expectations before exporting to PTX.
- NanoMD is commonly used in document workflows.
When to use PTX
- Your target workflow expects PTX.
- Improve delivery compatibility with PTX.
- PTX is commonly used in image workflows.
FAQs
Why convert NanoMD to PTX?
Convert to PTX when preserving compatibility with an existing proprietary capture archive or working inside a specialist workflow that still expects it.
It is mainly an archival and migration format.
What changes when converting NanoMD to PTX?
This conversion changes how the format behaves in downstream tools and delivery environments.
What should I review after converting NanoMD to PTX?
Validate output quality on representative files and confirm the target format behaves correctly in the destination workflow.