It is a document file format developed in China by Chinese office of software work group (COSWG). It is an open standard for office applications sometimes known as unified office format. It includes presentation, words processing and spreadsheets. Although there are specific applications for each which are widely and commonly used compared to UOF, for text documents(UOT), Presentation(UOP), and spreadsheets(UOS).
In an effort to create an open document standard, Microsoft in collaboration with ISO/IEC and Ecma, developed the Office Open XML standard in 2006. One of the filename extensions supported in this specification is the .docx extension, a text document filename extension. The .docx was introduced in Microsoft Office Word 2007 and has been supported ever since in later iterations. It has become the default filename extension for all text documents produced using Microsoft Office Word. Given the open source nature of the XML specification, more alternative document processing applications support read and write capabilities on documents saved with the .docx filename extension. This is in comparison to the .doc filename extension which is a proprietary asset owned by Microsoft.
FreeFileConvert uses tuned encoding for UOF to DOCX conversions, preserving clarity while trimming file size. Finished audio streams instantly across phones, tablets, desktops, and modern browsers without extra tweaks.
Upload UOF files from desktop, tablet, or cloud storage, queue multiple jobs, and let the converter finish autonomously. Return whenever convenient to download synchronized DOCX results on any device you rely on.
Process up to 5 files sized 1000 MB per batch without splitting queues manually. Mixed-format uploads convert together, producing consistent DOCX audio with dependable progress tracking.
UOF is one of the formats more likely to be accessible in future because it is in an open documented standards. It has standard representation (ASCII, Unicode), it is uncompressed and unencrypted.
The .docx filename extension is specified in the open standard ISO/IEC 29500-1:2012. A free compatibility update allows older versions of Microsoft Office Word such as Office 2003 to open .docx documents.
Upload your document file in the UOF format from your device, Dropbox, or Google Drive.
Select DOCX as the output format and click Convert. Adjust optional settings if needed.
Download the converted document file. Each file stays available for up to 5 downloads.