CMX to PAM Converter

Free CMX to PAM conversion — portable anymap online

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Universal Netpbm

PAM handles any pixel type — monochrome, grayscale, color, or with alpha. CMX to PAM produces the most flexible Netpbm output.

Cloud-Powered

Conversion runs on remote servers. Your local device stays free while CMX files are processed to PAM format.

Maximum Portability

PAM images are readable by virtually every image processing toolkit. Your CMX artwork becomes universally portable data.

How to convert CMX to PAM

1

Select files from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, URL or by dragging it on the page.

2

Choose pam or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your pam file right afterwards

About formats

CMX (Corel Presentation Exchange) is a vector graphics exchange format developed by Corel Corporation, introduced with CorelDRAW 5 in September 1994. Designed as a cross-application interchange format within the Corel product suite, CMX stores vector objects, text, bitmaps, and rendering attributes in a structure accessible to CorelDRAW, Corel PHOTO-PAINT, Corel Presentations, and other Corel applications without requiring each program to understand the full CDR native format. The format uses a chunk-based architecture that encodes geometric primitives, fill patterns, outline properties, and color definitions in a standardized way, supporting both 16-bit and 32-bit variants. CMX gained significance beyond the Corel ecosystem through its adoption by third-party applications and its role in clipart distribution — many vector art collections from the mid-to-late 1990s shipped in CMX format. One advantage is interoperability within design workflows: CMX provided a practical bridge for moving vector content between different Corel applications while preserving visual fidelity, gradients, and transparency attributes. The format's inclusion of both vector and bitmap data within a single file is another strength, allowing complex mixed-media illustrations to be exchanged as self-contained units. Microsoft also added CMX import support to some Office applications, expanding the format's reach. While modern Corel applications primarily use CDR for native work and export to SVG, PDF, or EPS for interchange, CMX files from the CorelDRAW era remain widely encountered in legacy asset libraries.
Developer: Corel Corporation
Initial release: 1994
PAM (Portable Arbitrary Map) is a raster image format added to the Netpbm family around the year 2000 by Bryan Henderson, the maintainer of Netpbm, as a generalization that unifies and extends the original PBM, PGM, and PPM formats. Where the classic Netpbm formats each handle a specific image type (PBM for bilevel, PGM for grayscale, PPM for color), PAM provides a single format that can represent any combination of channels, bit depths, and image types through a flexible ASCII header. The PAM header uses keyword-value pairs: WIDTH, HEIGHT, DEPTH (number of channels), MAXVAL (maximum sample value, up to 65535), and TUPLTYPE (a string identifying the image type — BLACKANDWHITE, GRAYSCALE, RGB, GRAYSCALE_ALPHA, RGB_ALPHA, or custom types). After the header, pixel data is stored in binary, with each sample occupying one or two bytes depending on MAXVAL. PAM's key innovation over its predecessors is native alpha channel support: GRAYSCALE_ALPHA (2-channel) and RGB_ALPHA (4-channel) tupletypes provide transparency without requiring a separate mask file, something the original PBM/PGM/PPM formats could not express. One advantage is format unification: a single PAM-reading implementation handles monochrome, grayscale, color, and alpha-augmented images, eliminating the need for separate parsers for each Netpbm variant. The extensible TUPLTYPE mechanism provides another practical strength — custom channel configurations (multispectral, depth + color, or any application-specific arrangement) can be represented and labeled without modifying the format specification. PAM is supported by Netpbm tools, ImageMagick, GIMP, and programming libraries that process the Netpbm family.
Initial release: 2000

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert CMX to PAM?

PAM is the most versatile Netpbm format — it handles any color model. Converting CMX to PAM produces universally portable image data.

What opens PAM files?

Netpbm tools, GIMP, XnView, and most Unix/Linux image processing utilities support PAM natively.

How is PAM different from PPM?

PAM is a superset of PBM/PGM/PPM formats. It supports arbitrary color models including alpha channels in a single, flexible format.

Is the converter free?

Basic CMX to PAM conversion is free on Convertio. Premium subscriptions offer expanded file limits.

How fast is the process?

CMX to PAM conversion completes in seconds. All processing runs on Convertio cloud servers.