Do You Need Text Recognition? Recognize text

RLE to RTF Converter

Export compressed rasters as RTF format online for free

Drop files here. 1 GB maximum file size or Sign Up
to
Facebook Amazon Microsoft Tesla Nestle Walmart L'Oreal

Batch Support

Upload multiple RLE images and convert them all to RTF in one session — no need to repeat the process for each individual file.

Research Data Access

Utah RLE images from early CG research become viewable again when converted to RTF — no specialized toolkit needed.

Cloud Processing

Conversion runs on remote servers, so your computer stays fast. Even large RLE images are handled without slowing your device.

How to convert RLE to RTF

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

RLE (Run-Length Encoded) in the context of the Utah RLE format refers to a raster image file format developed by Spencer W. Thomas at the University of Utah's Computer Science Department around 1983, as part of the Utah Raster Toolkit. The format stores images using a scanline-oriented run-length encoding scheme that compresses sequences of identical pixel values into count-value pairs, achieving good compression ratios for images with large areas of solid color — typical of computer-generated graphics and rendered scenes common in computer science research at the time. Utah RLE supports 1 to 255 color channels per pixel, with 8 bits per channel, and includes a header specifying image dimensions, number of channels, background color, and an optional color map. The format accommodates alpha channel data as an additional channel, and empty scanlines (matching the background color) can be omitted entirely for further compression. The Utah Raster Toolkit provided a suite of Unix command-line tools for manipulating RLE images — operations like compositing, scaling, rotating, color manipulation, and format conversion — establishing a software paradigm later echoed by Netpbm and ImageMagick. One advantage is the format's foundational role in computer graphics: the Utah Raster Toolkit and its RLE format emerged from the same research environment that produced the Phong shading model, Gouraud shading, and the teapot — and much of the early computer graphics research output was stored in this format. The format is supported by ImageMagick, GIMP, and various legacy graphics tools.
Initial release: 1983
RTF (Rich Text Format) is a document interchange format developed by Microsoft and first published in 1987 with Word 3.0. The format encodes document content and formatting as plain ASCII text using control words (backslash-prefixed commands) and groups (curly-brace-delimited sections) that describe fonts, character formatting, paragraph layout, tables, images, and page setup. Because RTF is fundamentally a text format with no binary components, documents pass cleanly through any text channel — email systems, clipboard operations, and cross-platform transfers — without corruption. Microsoft designed RTF explicitly as a cross-application and cross-platform exchange format, and it achieved broad adoption: virtually every word processor, text editor, and document tool on every operating system has supported RTF reading and writing for decades. One advantage is exceptional cross-platform compatibility — an RTF document created on any application renders with consistent formatting on any other, making it the most reliable format for text exchange between incompatible systems. The text-based structure provides another benefit: RTF files resist corruption, are trivially generated by programs (requiring only string concatenation), and can be debugged by reading the raw markup in a text editor. While RTF lacks modern features like tracked changes and advanced layout controls, and Microsoft declared the specification frozen at version 1.9.1 in 2008, the format persists as a dependable interchange option where DOCX compatibility cannot be assumed.
Developer: Microsoft
Initial release: 1987

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert RLE to RTF?

Utah RLE is an academic format with very limited tool support. Converting to RTF ensures your computer graphics research data remains accessible.

What programs can open RTF?

Microsoft Word, LibreOffice Writer, Apple TextEdit, WordPad, Google Docs, and most text editors handle RTF documents.

Will I lose image quality converting RLE to RTF?

RTF preserves image data without lossy compression, so the visual content from your RLE is retained faithfully during conversion.

How long does RLE to RTF conversion take?

The process is fast — cloud-based processing handles RLE to RTF conversion in seconds for standard-sized images, even on slower connections.

Does Convertio support batch RLE to RTF conversion?

Absolutely. Add several RLE images at once, set RTF as the output, and the converter processes them all in parallel for maximum efficiency.