All conversions run locally in your browser. We do not upload or store your files.

Back to all guides

2026-05-22 · 9 min read

PDF, DOCX, and CSV explained for everyday work

Choose the right format for sharing, editing, and data import — and know when to convert.

File formats confuse non-technical users: when to keep PDF, when Word is better, when CSV beats Excel. This primer helps you pick formats and use Document Converter tools without losing data you care about.

PDF: fixed layout, universal viewing

PDF preserves visual appearance across devices — ideal for finished documents, forms, and print. PDF is weak for editing: text may not flow, and scans are images. Share contracts and brochures as PDF; do not expect collaborators to edit heavily in Word after PDF to Word conversion.

Use our Word to PDF or HTML to PDF tools for authoring; use PDF Merge/Split for assembly.

DOCX: editable documents

DOCX (Office Open XML) is the modern Word format for drafts, track changes, and templates. Save legacy .doc files as .docx before browser conversion. DOCX separates content from layout more cleanly than PDF, making it the right archive when you expect future edits.

Convert DOCX to HTML or Markdown when publishing to the web or git-based docs.

CSV: data interchange

CSV (comma-separated values) is plain text rows and columns — perfect for databases, scripts, and imports. Excel to CSV exports values from the first sheet without formulas or charts. CSV to Excel wraps CSV in an .xlsx container for filtering and charts.

Use UTF-8 CSV for international characters. Watch for commas inside fields — proper CSV quoting handles them.

Common conversion mistakes

Do not round-trip PDF → Word → PDF expecting identical layout. Do not use CSV as long-term archive for complex spreadsheets with macros. Do not email huge uncompressed scan PDFs when portals cap at 5 MB — compress thoughtfully.

Always keep the original format until the converted file passes your review.

Decision cheat sheet

Sharing final version? → PDF. Collaborating on text? → DOCX. Feeding data to another system? → CSV. Need photos as one file? → Images to PDF. Need text from scan? → PDF to TXT with OCR.

Document Converter connects these formats in-browser without uploads — pick the tool matching your destination, not the buzzword you remember.

Back to home: Home