Upgrading from Word 2003, now all my documents are a mixture of .doc and .docx files.
Is there an easy way to convert all the .doc files to .docx.
Thanks
![]() |
Patch reliability is unclear, but widespread attacks make patching prudent. Go ahead and patch, but watch out for potential problems. |
SIGN IN | Not a member? | REGISTER | PLUS MEMBERSHIP |
-
Converting .doc to .docx?
Home » Forums » AskWoody support » Productivity software by function » MS Word and word processing help » Converting .doc to .docx?
- This topic has 21 replies, 12 voices, and was last updated 12 years ago.
AuthorTopicViewing 10 reply threadsAuthorReplies-
WSnate01pa
AskWoody Plus -
WSErikson
AskWoody LoungerMarch 21, 2013 at 2:38 pm #1382299Thanks for your reply.
You are from the town where I was born. I really miss the east coast
Anyway I appreciate your response. I did notice that both formats were available
but when I saved a .docx file to a folder, the folder would not show the .doc files
that were already there.
I could reopen the file and see all the files (both extensions) but I like to be able
to check at the time I am saving if there is a similar document to the one I am
saving.
Guess it is not a big deal.
Thanks -
RuosChalet
AskWoody PlusApril 19, 2013 at 2:07 am #1388544I did notice that both formats were available
but when I saved a .docx file to a folder, the folder would not show the .doc files
that were already there.
I could reopen the file and see all the files (both extensions) but I like to be able
to check at the time I am saving if there is a similar document to the one I am
saving.I use Word 2003, but occassionally view and save .docx files, too. As others have explained, the SAVE AS dialog filters the list of files already in the destination folder. However, in Word 2003 anyway, if you simply type the wildcard “*” in the name box and hit return, Word will display ALL files. You can also enter “*.do*” and Word will show you just *.DOC, *.DOCX and *.DOCM files.
This trick may work in newer versions of Word, too. I agree with those who say leave the files in their native format. If this trick works for you, you’ll still be able to preview files already in the folder when using the SAVE AS dialog. Good luck. ~RonR
-
philomel
AskWoody PlusApril 20, 2013 at 11:26 pm #1388806When you are saving the .Docx file you will see two boxes, one above the other. The top one gets the name of the file. The bottom one shows the file type, in your case docx. Next to it is an arrow, click it and select all file types.
It will show the Doc, Docx, etc; all of the files in the folder. -
RuosChalet
AskWoody PlusApril 22, 2013 at 1:45 am #1388932When you are saving the .Docx file you will see two boxes, one above the other. The top one gets the name of the file. The bottom one shows the file type, in your case docx. Next to it is an arrow, click it and select all file types.
It will show the Doc, Docx, etc; all of the files in the folder.philomel:
In the SAVE AS dialog, you cannot select “All files.” The very nature of the Save as Type dropdown list is to specify a SINGLE file type. To view all files in the destination folder, you must enter the wildcard in the “Name” box (i.e., * or *.*). See my earlier post.The OP wanted to review files already in the folder when saving as DOCX. He could change the Save As Type to DOC and the folder would display all files of that type, but he’d have to remember to set the Save As Type back to DOCX, if that was his intent.
Using the wild card, the folder displays ALL files while leaving the Save As Type at the default (DOCX or DOC). ~RonR
-
-
-
-
Andrew Lockton
AskWoody_MVPMarch 21, 2013 at 4:54 pm #1382500The list of files shown in a SaveAs dialog is often filtered due to the ‘save as type’ option under the field where you type the new filename. When you choose to save as docx, the filter is set to show the folders + only the files which end .docx. If you change this filter to show all doc files (*.doc) then you will see those file types contained in that folder. Unfortunately, in that particular dialog it is not so simple to see both file types at the same time.
-
WSErikson
AskWoody LoungerMarch 22, 2013 at 8:08 am #1382584Hi Andrew
Thanks for your explanation.
I have used Word for many years and have gotten into a rut
using just the features necessary to do what I want to write.
There are most likely many features that would simplify my
work but habit and familiarity keep me in the same rut.
Thanks for your explanation.
Erikson
macropod
AskWoody_MVPMarch 22, 2013 at 10:35 am #1382614It’s actually more complex than even that – you can have three Word documents with the same name: one using doc; another using docx; and yet another using docm. Whichever save option you have active won’t show the other files using what is ostensibly the same name. It’s the same if you choose any other save formats too.
Cheers,
Paul Edstein
[Fmr MS MVP - Word]-
WSErikson
AskWoody Lounger
WSwobblerlorri
AskWoody LoungerMarch 28, 2013 at 6:30 am #1383554As I understand it, you’re wanting to batch convert your .doc to .docx files. There’s a way to do it, but it’s not exactly elegant.
Here’s the process: http://blogs.msdn.com/b/ericwhite/archive/2008/09/19/bulk-convert-doc-to-docx.aspx
A quick summary:
1. Download and install Microsoft Office Compatibility Pack. You have to install this even though you have Office 2007.
2. Download and install Microsoft Office Migration Planning Manager (MOMPM).
3. Edit the OFC.INI file in the MOMPM in the Tools directory and save it.
4. Run OFC.EXE which is located in the same directory.
According to the article above, this will batch convert all your .doc files to .docx — if I were you, I’d try it on just a sampling of files copied into a test directory. Make sure the files are useable by opening them in Office. If you’re happy, re-edit OFC.INI to use the real directory your files are saved to, and have at it.
Of course, you know to BACKUP, BACKUP, BACKUP before you do anything…
Personally, I’d just save each file as .docx as I used it. Or not upgrade to Office 2007 (still using 2003 and not gonna change it).
-
George S. Augustas
AskWoody PlusMarch 28, 2013 at 8:02 am #1383592I took a different approach. When I bought a new Windows 7 computer, I installed Office 2010. I had previously used Office 2000 in Windows XP. Since I had so many doc files and wanted everything to be the same (as my old computer), I set the default file format to doc instead of docx. Now Word always saves files in doc format unless I choose otherwise. Maybe doc files aren’t quite as compact as docx files and maybe there are some advanced features that aren’t saved (in doc format), but I have not had any issues with this method.
-
WShandcuff36
AskWoody LoungerMarch 28, 2013 at 8:46 am #1383656GS, hello. >>> I had previously used Office 2000 in Windows XP <<<
I am on W-8 now and I still use Office 2000 for all my needs. It ran good on my path from W98, ( yes ! ) via XP, Millenium, Vista, W-7 and now W-8. One MS guru was quoted as saying that their main competition on Office 03 was all the previous versions of Office. I agree. JP.
-
bmeacham
AskWoody Plus -
philomel
AskWoody PlusMarch 28, 2013 at 3:00 pm #1383795There is another way to convert a .doc file to .docx.
Open Word, go to file>>options >>save >> save files in this format[ ] pick the 1 of 15 formats.
Open each file (allow it to open completely) then save it. It will save as your flavormat. now you will have both verify 2 before deleting 1.
You could to prevent confusion load from folder A, save in B, verify, delete folder A and all files in it. I am sassuming you don’t have thousands of files.
If there are thousands burn a dvd then use DOS to convert or your other favorite file wrench.
-
-
-
WSErikson
AskWoody LoungerMarch 28, 2013 at 7:50 am #1383566Hi
Thank you for your reply.
I have previously decided to leave things as they are and change the extension as that paper is revisited, much like your last suggestion.
That is a very interesting procedure you have outlined but it does lack a certain elegance.
Thank you for the time you spent with this suggestion but I think I’ll stick to Plan B.
EriksonWSjackhh
AskWoody LoungerMarch 28, 2013 at 7:59 am #1383571If you do not have a specific need to use the .docx format, another alternative is to continue to use .doc as the default extension. You can change the default save format by pressing the Office button, choosing Word Options and choosing the Save category. The Save files in this format option has a drop down list to select the default format. This is helpful if you are sharing docs with others using Word 2003 or earlier.
WSErikson
AskWoody LoungerWSgeorgelee
AskWoody LoungerMarch 29, 2013 at 3:52 pm #1384061At some point in the next 12 months I shall buy a new PC and will install Office 2010 Home and Student as I have a three user version and only one in use.
As there are thousands of doc. files to transfer to the new machine, and being reluctant to have both doc. and docx, my inclination is to make doc. the default.
But is there any real advantage in the newer format?
macropod
AskWoody_MVPMarch 29, 2013 at 4:34 pm #1384099The docx format makes for smaller files and supports numerous features not available in the doc format. Check out some of the Office 2007 reviews to get an idea of the differences. Most of the additional functionality Office 2007 introduced (expanded since) relies on the new file formats.
Cheers,
Paul Edstein
[Fmr MS MVP - Word]philomel
AskWoody PlusMarch 29, 2013 at 6:07 pm #1384107A .doc file is in HTML format I believe and a .DocX file is in XML format. They are different animals.
NCH software NC.com has a converter, Doxillion, which will BATCH CONVERT from one to the other for ~ 19.95 USD.
Their ad says you can convert thousands at a time and if necessary back again.
Sounds like a church with thousands of converts?macropod
AskWoody_MVPMarch 29, 2013 at 6:43 pm #1384111philomel: A .doc file is not stored in HTML formt, but in a proprietary binary format. A docx file is actual a zip archive of numerous xml files, plus and images etc that may be embedded in the document. The file conversion can be done easily enough with a macro. Do note that not everything in a docx file can be converted to the doc format.
PS: Another thing to consider is that documents containing macros and/or ActiveX controls cannot be converted to the docx format – those documents need to be converted to the docm format.
Cheers,
Paul Edstein
[Fmr MS MVP - Word]Viewing 10 reply threads -

Plus Membership
Donations from Plus members keep this site going. You can identify the people who support AskWoody by the Plus badge on their avatars.
AskWoody Plus members not only get access to all of the contents of this site -- including Susan Bradley's frequently updated Patch Watch listing -- they also receive weekly AskWoody Plus Newsletters (formerly Windows Secrets Newsletter) and AskWoody Plus Alerts, emails when there are important breaking developments.
Get Plus!
Welcome to our unique respite from the madness.
It's easy to post questions about Windows 11, Windows 10, Win8.1, Win7, Surface, Office, or browse through our Forums. Post anonymously or register for greater privileges. Keep it civil, please: Decorous Lounge rules strictly enforced. Questions? Contact Customer Support.
Search Newsletters
Search Forums
View the Forum
Search for Topics
Recent Topics
-
Return of the brain dead FF sidebar
by
EricB
20 minutes ago -
windows settings managed by your organization
by
WSDavidO61
37 minutes ago -
Securing Laptop for Trustee Administrattor
by
PeachesP
3 hours, 26 minutes ago -
The local account tax
by
Susan Bradley
2 hours, 37 minutes ago -
Recall is back with KB5055627(OS Build 26100.3915) Preview
by
Alex5723
5 hours, 58 minutes ago -
Digital TV Antenna Recommendation
by
Win7and10
5 hours, 33 minutes ago -
Server 2019 Domain Controllers broken by updates
by
MP Support
17 hours, 51 minutes ago -
Google won’t remove 3rd party cookies in Chrome as promised
by
Alex5723
19 hours, 29 minutes ago -
Microsoft Manager Says macOS Is Better Than Windows 11
by
Alex5723
22 hours, 42 minutes ago -
Outlook (NEW) Getting really Pushy
by
RetiredGeek
1 hour, 7 minutes ago -
Steps to take before updating to 24H2
by
Susan Bradley
37 minutes ago -
Which Web browser is the most secure for 2025?
by
B. Livingston
5 hours, 34 minutes ago -
Replacing Skype
by
Peter Deegan
13 hours, 4 minutes ago -
FileOptimizer — Over 90 tools working together to squish your files
by
Deanna McElveen
16 hours, 33 minutes ago -
Excel Macro — ask for filename to be saved
by
nhsj
1 day, 1 hour ago -
Trying to backup Win 10 computer to iCloud
by
SheltieMom
3 hours, 58 minutes ago -
Windows 11 Insider Preview build 26200.5570 released to DEV
by
joep517
2 days, 22 hours ago -
Windows 11 Insider Preview build 26120.3941 (24H2) released to BETA
by
joep517
3 days ago -
Windows 11 Insider Preview Build 22635.5305 (23H2) released to BETA
by
joep517
3 days ago -
No April cumulative update for Win 11 23H2?
by
Peobody
1 day, 12 hours ago -
AugLoop.All (TEST Augmentation Loop MSIT)
by
LarryK
3 days ago -
Boot Sequence for Dell Optiplex 7070 Tower
by
Serge Carniol
3 days, 16 hours ago -
OTT Upgrade Windows 11 to 24H2 on Unsupported Hardware
by
bbearren
3 days, 19 hours ago -
Inetpub can be tricked
by
Susan Bradley
2 days, 3 hours ago -
How merge Outlook 2016 .pst file w/into newly created Outlook 2024 install .pst?
by
Tex265
2 days, 13 hours ago -
FBI 2024 Internet Crime Report
by
Alex5723
3 days, 23 hours ago -
Perplexity CEO says its browser will track everything users do online
by
Alex5723
1 day, 8 hours ago -
Login issues with Windows Hello
by
CWBillow
4 days, 10 hours ago -
How to get into a manual setup screen in 2024 Outlook classic?
by
Tex265
3 days, 22 hours ago -
Linux : ARMO rootkit “Curing”
by
Alex5723
4 days, 22 hours ago
Recent blog posts
Key Links
Want to Advertise in the free newsletter? How about a gift subscription in honor of a birthday? Send an email to sb@askwoody.com to ask how.
Mastodon profile for DefConPatch
Mastodon profile for AskWoody
Home • About • FAQ • Posts & Privacy • Forums • My Account
Register • Free Newsletter • Plus Membership • Gift Certificates • MS-DEFCON Alerts
Copyright ©2004-2025 by AskWoody Tech LLC. All Rights Reserved.