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Change the default program for editing imported graphics

1. On the Tools menu, click Options, and then click the Edit tab.
2. In the Picture editor box, click the program you want to use to modify imported
graphics.

Graphics file types Word can use


You can insert many popular graphics file formats into your document either directly or with the
use of separate graphics filters. You don't need a separate graphics filter installed to insert the
following file formats:

Enhanced Metafile (.emf)

Graphics Interchange Format (.gif)

Joint Photographic Experts Group (.jpg)

Portable Network Graphics (.png)

Microsoft Windows Bitmap (.bmp, .rle, .dib)

Windows Metafile Graphics (.wmf)

Tagged Image File Format (.TIFF)

Encapsulated PostScript (.eps)

File types that require filters


You do need a graphics filter installed to insert all other graphics file formats listed below. If you
didn't install the filter you need when you installed Microsoft Word on your computer, you can
run the setup program again and add the graphics filter.
Computer Graphics Metafile
The Computer Graphics Metafile graphics filter (Cgmimp32.flt) supports Version 1 of CGM
1992. The filter handles all three encodings and interprets and supports all elements, and will
correctly handle all valid .cgm graphics files.

The major industry profiles of ATA (Air Transport Association) and CALS (Continuous
Acquisition and Life Cycle Support) are fully supported by the Computer Graphics Metafile
filter. The filter has been certified as ATA-compliant and CALS-compliant by testing
administered by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST).
If you install the filter during Setup, the following files are installed: Cgmimp32.flt,
Cgmimp32.fnt, Cgmimp32.cfg, and Cgmimp32.hlp.
This filter has the following limitation: CGM 1992 Versions 2, 3, and 4 are not supported.
CorelDRAW graphics filter
The CorelDRAW graphics filter (Cdrimp32.flt) supports .cdr, .cdt, .cmx, and .pat files from
CorelDRAW 3.0, 4.0, 5.0, 6.0, and 9.0.
This filter has the following limitations:

Object and PostScript texture fills are replaced with solid gray fills.

Gradient fills are split into monocolored stripes.

There is no support for:


o CorelDRAW preferences, such as page size and orientation, units, grid, and
guidelines.
o Lenses and powerclips.
o Pages, layers, and groups.
o OLE objects.
o Rotated bitmaps.
o Vector fills.
o Multiarea paragraph text.
Encapsulated PostScript (.eps) filter

The Encapsulated PostScript graphics filter (Epsimp32.flt) supports the Adobe Systems
Encapsulated PostScript Specification versions 3.0 and earlier. The filter supports .eps images
from tagged image file format (TIFF) and Windows Metafile (.wmf) embedded previews.
If an Encapsulated PostScript graphics file contains an embedded TIFF or Windows Metafile
preview, a representation of the image appears on the screen. The quality of the preview depends
on the resolution of the TIFF or Windows Metafile image embedded in the Encapsulated
PostScript file when it is created. Low, medium, and high resolutions are generally available for
creating an EPS file. The higher the resolution of the preview image, the larger the EPS file size
will be. Because such previews are intended primarily to be used to position images on the page,
resolution is often low. A high-resolution preview is not necessary because it is discarded when
the EPS file is printed to a PostScript printer.
If an embedded TIFF or Windows Metafile preview is not included in the Encapsulated
PostScript graphic you import, the graphic displays a message instead of a preview of the graphic

in your document. However, the graphic prints correctly to a PostScript printer. If you print an
EPS graphic to a non-PostScript printer, the preview image is printed as it appears on the screen.
Encapsulated PostScript graphics are designed for printing to a PostScript printer.
Macintosh PICT (.pct) file
The Macintosh PICT graphics filter (Pictim32.flt) is used to import Macintosh PICT graphics.
Rename your Macintosh PICT files with the .pct extension when you copy them to a computer
that uses Microsoft Windows so that Microsoft Office for Windows can recognize the files as
PICT graphics. For example, if you have a graphics file named Bear on the Macintosh, you
should rename the file to Bear.pct before you insert the file into a file for Windows.
WordPerfect Graphics import and export filters
The WordPerfect Graphics import filter (Wpgimp32.flt) supports WordPerfect Graphics Versions
1.0, 1.0e, and 2.0, which correspond to WordPerfect Version 6.x and earlier. For .wpg images
created in DrawPerfect, the picture frame size is the size of the screen.
This filter has the following limitations:

PostScript information is lost in Encapsulated PostScript images embedded in


WordPerfect Graphics files.

WordPerfect Graphics files with large, embedded bitmaps might not appear properly on
computers that use the Mach series video drivers from ATI. If you think you have this
problem, try running Microsoft Windows Setup and changing your video driver to the
8514/a drivers supplied with Windows.
Other filters

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