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DOC vs GIF

DOC vs GIF

A detailed comparison of Word Document (Legacy) and GIF Image — file size, quality, compatibility, and which format to choose for your workflow.

DOC

Word Document (Legacy)

Documents & Text

DOC is the legacy binary format used by Microsoft Word 97-2003. While superseded by DOCX, many archived and legacy documents still use this format and require conversion for modern editing.

About DOC files
GIF

GIF Image

Raster & Vector Images

GIF supports animation and transparency with a 256-color palette. While limited in color depth, it remains the most universally supported animated image format across platforms and messaging apps.

About GIF files

Strengths Comparison

DOC Strengths

  • Universal compatibility — every Word version since 1997 reads it natively.
  • Rich feature set: styles, tables, comments, track changes, embedded OLE objects.
  • Binary format means fast loading even on slow machines.
  • Well-understood after decades of reverse-engineering — dozens of parsers exist.

GIF Strengths

  • Universal animation support — every browser, every chat app, every social network.
  • Transparent backgrounds for compositing against any page color.
  • Lossless for its limited palette — pixel-perfect at 256 colors.
  • Self-contained: no codec, no browser plugin, no third-party player needed.

Limitations

DOC Limitations

  • Legacy format — Microsoft stopped improving it in 2007; new features require DOCX.
  • Binary structure is fragile; corruption often makes files unrecoverable.
  • Historic malware magnet: embedded macros have spread viruses since the 1990s.
  • Not open-standard — DOCX is the ISO-standardized successor.
  • Subtle formatting drifts when opened in LibreOffice or Google Docs.

GIF Limitations

  • Limited to 256 colors per frame — looks posterized on photographs.
  • Dithering for color-rich images makes files huge (often 10× an MP4 equivalent).
  • No audio track.
  • Transparency is 1-bit (on/off) — no smooth alpha blending.
  • Poor compression compared to modern formats (WebP, MP4, AVIF).

Technical Specifications

Specification DOC GIF
MIME type application/msword image/gif
Container OLE Compound File (Word 97-2003)
Standard MS-DOC [MS-OOPR] (released 2008)
Successor .docx (2007)
Character encoding UTF-16 LE (Word 97+)
Compression LZW (lossless, patent expired 2004)
Color depth 8-bit indexed (256 colors per frame)
Transparency 1-bit (on/off)
Animation Supported natively
Max dimensions 65,535 × 65,535 per frame

Typical File Sizes

DOC

  • Short letter 25-50 KB
  • 20-page report 150-400 KB
  • Book manuscript with images 2-20 MB

GIF

  • Short reaction meme (2s loop) 500 KB – 2 MB
  • Screen recording demo (10s) 3–15 MB
  • Static transparent icon 2–20 KB

Ready to convert?

Convert between DOC and GIF online, free, and without installing anything. Encrypted upload, automatic deletion after 2 hours.

Frequently Asked Questions

DOC is the legacy Microsoft Word binary format used from 1983 to 2007, storing text, images, formatting, and embedded objects in the OLE Compound File container since Word 97. It was replaced as default by DOCX in Office 2007 but remains widely used in legacy archives and older government systems.

DOC files open in every Microsoft Word version from 1997 onward, Google Docs (free), LibreOffice Writer (free), Apple Pages, and most online viewers like OneDrive and Dropbox preview. On iPhone and Android, Word apps open DOC natively.

Use KaijuConverter's DOC-to-PDF converter for a single-click conversion. Microsoft Word, Google Docs, and LibreOffice all export to PDF natively via "Save as PDF" or the print menu — the result is identical and preserves every font, layout, and image.

Always DOCX for new documents. DOCX files are 75% smaller thanks to ZIP compression, follow the ISO/IEC 29500 standard, and support every modern Word feature. DOC is essentially a legacy compatibility format — Microsoft stopped improving it in 2007.

Older DOC files could contain VBA macros that became a common malware vector in the 2000s. Modern Office blocks macros by default. If you receive a suspicious .doc, open it in Google Docs or LibreOffice first — both strip macros automatically during import.

Yes. Open the .doc in Microsoft Word and use Save As → Word Document (.docx). LibreOffice Writer offers the same export. Formatting transfers cleanly in 99% of cases; complex features like some legacy form fields may need minor manual fixes.