ConverterHQ
ConverterHQ

Internet-scale file conversion.

Sign in

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

VIDEO

Xfig to HEVC/H.265 Converter — Free, Online, No Signup

Convert Xfig files to HEVC/H.265 online with no signup required.

Reverse conversion

Xfig at a glance

Xfig

Xfig began in 1985 and accumulated decades of maintenance and export tooling, which made the .fig format a durable bridge between interactive diagram editing on Unix systems and downstream conversion to PostScript, PDF, and other outputs.

HEVC/H.265 at a glance

HEVC/H.265

The Joint Collaborative Team on Video Coding developed HEVC through ITU-T VCEG and ISO MPEG, building on H.264 coding tools while introducing 64×64 coding tree units, advanced motion compensation, and scalable/multiview extensions.

Format comparison

Feature
Xfig
HEVC/H.265
File type

Vector

Video

Extensions
  • .fig

  • .mp4

  • .hevc

MIME type
  • application/x-xfig

  • video/mp4

Created year

1985

2013

Inventor

Supoj Sutanthavibul

Joint Collaborative Team on Video Coding (JCT-VC) — ITU-T and ISO/IEC

Status

legacy

active

Transparency

Not supported

Not supported

Animation

Not supported

Not supported

Primary use cases
  • illustration

  • diagramming

  • brand asset delivery

  • editing

  • mastering

  • streaming delivery

Layer support

Not supported

Not supported

When to use each format

When to use Xfig

  • Your source file is already in Xfig.
  • Preserve source expectations before exporting to HEVC/H.265.
  • Xfig is commonly used in vector workflows.

When to use HEVC/H.265

  • Your target workflow expects HEVC/H.265.
  • Improve delivery compatibility with HEVC/H.265.
  • HEVC/H.265 is commonly used in video workflows.

FAQs

Why convert Xfig to HEVC/H.265?

Convert to HEVC when the target environment can decode H.265 and the goal is to reduce bitrate for 4K, HDR, or long-form high-resolution video without giving up too much quality.

It is a strong target for premium streaming, UHD masters, efficient device delivery, and storage-sensitive archives that prioritize compression efficiency.

What changes when converting Xfig to HEVC/H.265?

This conversion changes how the format behaves in downstream tools and delivery environments.

What should I review after converting Xfig to HEVC/H.265?

Validate output quality on representative files and confirm the target format behaves correctly in the destination workflow.

Format resources

XfigHEVC/H.265

Related conversions

Suggested links