These include an XML markup file for each page, text, embedded fonts, raster images, 2D vector graphics, as well as the digital rights management information. Depending on the type of the document, the packages have different internal directory structures and names. Sample file sample. All rights reserved. XPS on Wikipedia. Click Object , which opens a new window. In the Object window, select the option to Create From File.
Click Browse and navigate to the location of the XPS file. Click the check box option for Display as Icon and click OK. Click the green Upload button on the CometDocs website. Navigate and click the XPS file you want to convert. Click Open. Click XPS to Word to begin the conversion process. To receive your file, click Enter Email and provide your email address. Click Send. Open Google Drive. Click New and then File Upload.
Browse and select the XPS file you want to view and click Open. After the XPS file loads into your drive, right-click it to Preview. From the Preview screen, click on the Printer icon in the top right of the screen. Since XPS documents are not word processing files, you might have some weird characters or spacing issues in your converted file. Here's some detailed info from MSDN forum: The problem is that XPS is fixed layout - which is only a hairs-breadth away from being a picture of the document - similar to a scanned fax copy of the document.
And in fact, if you read up on how XPS represents the document, each page is essentially just that: a picture. Word's DOCX format on the other hand is an editable format - which includes conceptual layout ideas such as: margins, paragraphs, line-wrapping, repeating headers and footers, etc. Of course there are more and more places out there writing direct-to-XPS tools, but none of those are really mainstream yet.
And for some software Adobe Reader specifically for which the Windows GDI is insufficient, they do their own rendering of each page down to a bitmap - and then send that bitmap to the GDI printer. The XPS can only contain the information that was sent to it via the printer driver: All graphics drawing commands.
As a result, an XPS "document" contains no knowledge of those layout concepts mentioned above - and does not even have a means by which they can be specified. Even if the XPS was created to contain text, each word of the text will probably be positioned independent of the remaining text. The best this could be represented in Word would be to have each text word or possibly line of text placed in a separate Text Box with a fixed location on the page.
This is why nobody bothers.
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