CONVERT
ORG → TXT
Fast, secure ORG to TXT conversion. No registration required.
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ORG is a document format oriented around a particular office suite or publishing pipeline. Reaching a TXT from there is one hop. Move a document from ORG into TXT while keeping structure and formatting intact. TXT is usually the better target when you need to email, sign, archive or hand the file to a tool that does not natively parse ORG. Conversion happens server-side in seconds and both files delete automatically. One more beat. ORG is a document format oriented around a particular office suite or publishing pipeline. Receiving format: TXT is the plain-text format — just characters and line breaks, no formatting.
Org-mode
Source formatOrg-mode is a markup language and organizational system created for GNU Emacs. It combines document authoring with task management, literate programming, and reproducible research in a plain text format with a powerful outlining structure.
Plain Text
Target formatTXT files contain unformatted plain text with no styling, images, or layout information. They are universally readable by any device and operating system, making them the simplest document format.
Why convert ORG to TXT
The driver for a ORG to TXT conversion is almost always the downstream audience: the editor, archivist, signer or reader who expects a TXT. Doing the conversion in a proper rendering pipeline, rather than hoping the receiving tool will figure it out, avoids layout drift and font substitutions.
HOW TO CONVERT
ORG → TXT
Provide the document
Select a ORG file. Very large documents (100+ pages) may take a few extra seconds to render completely.
Render to TXT
LibreOffice plus supporting filters translate the ORG into a fully-formed TXT with no structural drift.
Save the result
The converted TXT streams back over HTTPS; open in the target application to verify formatting.
Common Use Cases
Print shop delivery
Print houses accept TXT as a first-class submission format and reliably preserve pagination; ORG may reflow at the printer.
Archival preservation
TXT/A and related PDF archive standards are accepted by national libraries and long-term record keepers worldwide.
Multi-device reading
TXT renders identically on phones, tablets and desktops; ORG layout can shift based on the reader application.
Presentation handouts
Speakers distribute slide notes and references as TXT so attendees can view them without the source application.
ORG vs TXT — Strengths and limitations
What each format does best, and where it falls short.
ORG Strengths
- All-in-one productivity format — tasks, notes, agenda, papers.
- Plain UTF-8 text — diff-friendly, version-controllable.
- Literate programming with tangle/weave.
- Exports to HTML, PDF, LaTeX, ODT, Markdown, Beamer.
- Active open-source community with decades of extensions.
Limitations
- Emacs-centric — full power requires Emacs; other editors see syntax but miss features.
- Steep learning curve alongside Emacs itself.
- Limited mobile support (Orgzly on Android is the main option).
TXT Strengths
- Universally readable — every operating system, every editor, every programming language.
- Zero metadata overhead: the file size equals the character count (for ASCII).
- Safe to diff, grep, version-control, and pipe through command-line tools.
- Immune to format obsolescence: a text file from 1970 still opens today.
- Tiny footprint for structured data like logs or configuration.
Limitations
- No styling, images, or embedded structure — just characters.
- Character encoding ambiguity (ISO-8859-1 vs UTF-8 vs Windows-1252) causes "mojibake".
- Line-ending differences between OSes still cause subtle bugs today.
ORG vs TXT — Technical specifications
Side-by-side comparison of the technical details.
| Specification | ORG | TXT |
|---|---|---|
| MIME type | text/org | text/plain |
| Extension | .org | — |
| Encoding | UTF-8 | — |
| Native environment | GNU Emacs Org-mode | — |
| Creator | Carsten Dominik (2003) | — |
| Common encodings | — | UTF-8, UTF-16, ASCII, ISO-8859-1, Windows-1252 |
| Line endings | — | LF (Unix), CRLF (Windows), CR (classic Mac) |
| Max file size | — | Limited only by filesystem (no format-level limit) |
| Structure | — | None — flat sequence of characters |
ORG vs TXT — Typical file sizes
Approximate file sizes for common scenarios.
ORG
- Daily notes file 2-50 KB
- Research project aggregate 100 KB - 2 MB
- Literate-programming document with output 500 KB - 10 MB
TXT
- Short note < 1 KB
- README file 2–20 KB
- Full novel (~90,000 words) 500 KB – 1 MB
- Server log file (daily) 10 MB – 1 GB
Quality & Compatibility
The conversion preserves document structure rather than pixel-perfect rendering: a paragraph in ORG is a paragraph in TXT, not a bitmap snapshot. That means you can still edit and search the TXT. If you need exact visual fidelity (for legal or print workflows), export to PDF as the final step.
Tips for Best Results
- Run a spell-check in the TXT after conversion — occasionally hyphenation or language tagging shifts and typos become invisible to the original checker.
- Include fallback generic fonts (sans-serif, serif) in your style definitions so the TXT degrades gracefully when a font is missing on a viewer device.
- For archive-quality output, export to PDF/A after converting to TXT; this locks the document against future rendering drift.
Frequently Asked Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes, as long as the fonts are standard (system fonts or common office fonts like Arial, Calibri, Times, Helvetica). Custom corporate fonts survive if they are embedded in the source document; otherwise the conversion substitutes the closest available match, which can shift line breaks by a character or two.
Yes. Inline images are embedded into the TXT at full resolution, editable tables become native TXT tables, and hyperlinks keep their URLs. Complex features unique to ORG — macros, form fields, track-changes — are mapped where an equivalent exists in TXT and flattened into static content otherwise.
All uploads go over TLS, files are processed in isolated containers and both the source and the output are deleted within two hours. No account is required, file contents are never indexed or used for training, and the paid plan adds a signable data-processing agreement for regulated workflows.
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