📂 Batch Upload Rule
For multi-file uploads, all files in the same batch should use the same source type (for example all JPG or all MP3).
TXT (Plain Text) is a basic text-only document format. PDF (Portable Document Format) is a fixed-layout document format for sharing and printing. Try our Universal Converter for other file formats.
Quick rules and tips to get the best results.
For multi-file uploads, all files in the same batch should use the same source type (for example all JPG or all MP3).
Set your preferred output quality to balance file size and clarity. Compression behavior is tailored to each file format.
Each conversion request supports up to 200 MB total. Each user can upload a total of 500 MB per hour.
Completed jobs are saved on this device for up to 1 hour, unless you remove them from the list.
Converting TXT to PDF creates a fixed-layout document for sharing, printing, and long-term reference. Main content is usually preserved, but exact layout can shift based on page size, fonts, margins, and source-specific formatting behavior. Output size may grow when images, embedded assets, or higher quality settings are used. This route is useful when you need consistent viewing across operating systems and apps.
PDF follows fixed-layout pages for print and consistent sharing. During conversion, source structure is mapped into destination capabilities, so advanced elements can be simplified when no direct equivalent exists.
In TXT to PDF conversion, quality mainly controls how aggressively the output is compressed. Key parameters are LibreOffice PDF export quality, embedded-image recompression, and page-layout rendering behavior. Quality primarily affects raster graphics inside the PDF, while text/vector layout is governed by document rendering rules. Lower quality typically reduces size most on image-heavy pages.
Line wrapping, page breaks, and font substitution can vary between apps after conversion. A quick review in your destination app helps confirm headings, spacing, and embedded objects before you share files externally.
PDF is widely used for cross-platform sharing, but behavior can still differ between viewers and office suites. Keeping a master source copy makes re-exporting easier if strict formatting consistency is required.
Paragraph content is preserved, but line wrapping can change because PDF uses fixed page width. Long lines may wrap differently, so review headings, code-like blocks, and spacing before distribution.
Page breaks are created during layout rendering based on page size and margins rather than raw text line counts. This helps readability, but section boundaries may move compared with the source text editor.
For mostly plain text, mid-to-high settings are usually sufficient because there are few image assets to compress. Use higher values only when the file includes embedded visuals that need sharper rendering.