Inserting SVG files in a Microsoft Word document












69















How can I convert or insert an Inkscape SVG file to a Microsoft Word document?



Note: It has to be editable. The resulting exported PDF has selectable text.










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    Why .doc or .pub? .pdf would be more appropriate I think.

    – iglvzx
    Mar 6 '12 at 19:18











  • Its a requirement from my employer to be able to repurpose my resume. I'm editing the question since it has to be in doc. Its not preferable, but it is what it is. [Edit, the link to the resume was for an example of what it should look like in the word doc]

    – monksy
    Mar 6 '12 at 19:29













  • Do you have access to both Inkscape and Microsoft Word?

    – iglvzx
    Mar 6 '12 at 19:31











  • I think I'm missing something here. SVG is a graphic format, You could export it in any graphic format (let's say, as a GIF, PNG, JPG, BMP) and put it inside any Word document. It would be a graphic inside a .DOC document, the same way you would do with any picture...

    – woliveirajr
    Mar 6 '12 at 19:36











  • It has to be editable. The resulting exported PDF has selectable text.

    – monksy
    Mar 6 '12 at 19:37


















69















How can I convert or insert an Inkscape SVG file to a Microsoft Word document?



Note: It has to be editable. The resulting exported PDF has selectable text.










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    Why .doc or .pub? .pdf would be more appropriate I think.

    – iglvzx
    Mar 6 '12 at 19:18











  • Its a requirement from my employer to be able to repurpose my resume. I'm editing the question since it has to be in doc. Its not preferable, but it is what it is. [Edit, the link to the resume was for an example of what it should look like in the word doc]

    – monksy
    Mar 6 '12 at 19:29













  • Do you have access to both Inkscape and Microsoft Word?

    – iglvzx
    Mar 6 '12 at 19:31











  • I think I'm missing something here. SVG is a graphic format, You could export it in any graphic format (let's say, as a GIF, PNG, JPG, BMP) and put it inside any Word document. It would be a graphic inside a .DOC document, the same way you would do with any picture...

    – woliveirajr
    Mar 6 '12 at 19:36











  • It has to be editable. The resulting exported PDF has selectable text.

    – monksy
    Mar 6 '12 at 19:37
















69












69








69


23






How can I convert or insert an Inkscape SVG file to a Microsoft Word document?



Note: It has to be editable. The resulting exported PDF has selectable text.










share|improve this question
















How can I convert or insert an Inkscape SVG file to a Microsoft Word document?



Note: It has to be editable. The resulting exported PDF has selectable text.







microsoft-word conversion inkscape






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Sep 12 '13 at 15:20









clabacchio

2892521




2892521










asked Mar 6 '12 at 19:08









monksymonksy

89151529




89151529








  • 1





    Why .doc or .pub? .pdf would be more appropriate I think.

    – iglvzx
    Mar 6 '12 at 19:18











  • Its a requirement from my employer to be able to repurpose my resume. I'm editing the question since it has to be in doc. Its not preferable, but it is what it is. [Edit, the link to the resume was for an example of what it should look like in the word doc]

    – monksy
    Mar 6 '12 at 19:29













  • Do you have access to both Inkscape and Microsoft Word?

    – iglvzx
    Mar 6 '12 at 19:31











  • I think I'm missing something here. SVG is a graphic format, You could export it in any graphic format (let's say, as a GIF, PNG, JPG, BMP) and put it inside any Word document. It would be a graphic inside a .DOC document, the same way you would do with any picture...

    – woliveirajr
    Mar 6 '12 at 19:36











  • It has to be editable. The resulting exported PDF has selectable text.

    – monksy
    Mar 6 '12 at 19:37
















  • 1





    Why .doc or .pub? .pdf would be more appropriate I think.

    – iglvzx
    Mar 6 '12 at 19:18











  • Its a requirement from my employer to be able to repurpose my resume. I'm editing the question since it has to be in doc. Its not preferable, but it is what it is. [Edit, the link to the resume was for an example of what it should look like in the word doc]

    – monksy
    Mar 6 '12 at 19:29













  • Do you have access to both Inkscape and Microsoft Word?

    – iglvzx
    Mar 6 '12 at 19:31











  • I think I'm missing something here. SVG is a graphic format, You could export it in any graphic format (let's say, as a GIF, PNG, JPG, BMP) and put it inside any Word document. It would be a graphic inside a .DOC document, the same way you would do with any picture...

    – woliveirajr
    Mar 6 '12 at 19:36











  • It has to be editable. The resulting exported PDF has selectable text.

    – monksy
    Mar 6 '12 at 19:37










1




1





Why .doc or .pub? .pdf would be more appropriate I think.

– iglvzx
Mar 6 '12 at 19:18





Why .doc or .pub? .pdf would be more appropriate I think.

– iglvzx
Mar 6 '12 at 19:18













Its a requirement from my employer to be able to repurpose my resume. I'm editing the question since it has to be in doc. Its not preferable, but it is what it is. [Edit, the link to the resume was for an example of what it should look like in the word doc]

– monksy
Mar 6 '12 at 19:29







Its a requirement from my employer to be able to repurpose my resume. I'm editing the question since it has to be in doc. Its not preferable, but it is what it is. [Edit, the link to the resume was for an example of what it should look like in the word doc]

– monksy
Mar 6 '12 at 19:29















Do you have access to both Inkscape and Microsoft Word?

– iglvzx
Mar 6 '12 at 19:31





Do you have access to both Inkscape and Microsoft Word?

– iglvzx
Mar 6 '12 at 19:31













I think I'm missing something here. SVG is a graphic format, You could export it in any graphic format (let's say, as a GIF, PNG, JPG, BMP) and put it inside any Word document. It would be a graphic inside a .DOC document, the same way you would do with any picture...

– woliveirajr
Mar 6 '12 at 19:36





I think I'm missing something here. SVG is a graphic format, You could export it in any graphic format (let's say, as a GIF, PNG, JPG, BMP) and put it inside any Word document. It would be a graphic inside a .DOC document, the same way you would do with any picture...

– woliveirajr
Mar 6 '12 at 19:36













It has to be editable. The resulting exported PDF has selectable text.

– monksy
Mar 6 '12 at 19:37







It has to be editable. The resulting exported PDF has selectable text.

– monksy
Mar 6 '12 at 19:37












6 Answers
6






active

oldest

votes


















73














To embed an Inkscape drawing into a Word document:





  1. Open the file in Inkscape.



    open




  2. Save the file as an Enhanced Metafile (.emf).



    save as




  3. Be sure to untick Convert text to paths



    text to paths




  4. Insert the .emf file as a picture in a Word document.



    insertpicture






To edit the drawing and text:





  1. Right-click the picture and select Edit Picture.



    edit




  2. Click Yes to convert to a drawing object.



    object




  3. Tada!



    complete








share|improve this answer



















  • 4





    EMF export is only supported on Windows: wiki.inkscape.org/wiki/index.php/Release_notes/0.45#EMF_export

    – domen
    Mar 14 '13 at 15:16











  • This works also for OpenOffice/LibreOffice Draw ODG files. Thanks.

    – Greg
    Jun 12 '14 at 1:02






  • 1





    You can, if you want to import arbitrary SVG files platform-independent, convert them online

    – RAnders00
    Feb 3 '16 at 15:57











  • Mac supports only wmf types, not emf. At least there is a solution.

    – chmike
    Oct 8 '16 at 7:18






  • 2





    Export to EMF worked in Inkscape-0.91 on Ubuntu-16.04/Linux. (not MS-Windows-only feature now - may have been at the time of the prior comment.)

    – Randall Whitman
    Sep 19 '17 at 19:45



















19














2016 Update




Note: This feature is only available if you have an Office 365 subscription. If you are an Office 365 subscriber, make sure you
have the latest version of Office.




Microsoft Word 2016 can now directly import SVG:




  1. Place your cursor where you'd like the image to be inserted.

  2. Go to the Insert tab of the Ribbon.


  3. Click Pictures



    enter image description here



  4. Navigate to where the SVG file you wish to insert is located and
    select it. Click Insert.



Source: Insert SVG images in Microsoft Office



What's particularly cool is that looking under the covers reveals that SVG is being stored natively within the OOXML. This is much better for image quality preservation than importing to a raster format would be, and is more interoperable than EMF/WMF.



Platforms: SVG import unfortunately does not appear to be supported on the Mac platform or on Word Online as of this writing (August 2017).



2019 Update



SVG import is now supported on Mac, confirmed with an Office 365 subscription at least.






share|improve this answer





















  • 3





    This does not work for me although I have the latest updates installed on my Word 2016 (64Bit).

    – Devid
    Feb 11 '17 at 10:26






  • 5





    I have Office 2016 64Bit (16.07668.7101). When I try to insert a SVG image I get the message: "An error occurred while importing this file.". I have Windows 10 and I did file a report on Feedback Hub App, the title is: Word 2016 does not Insert SVG images

    – Devid
    Feb 11 '17 at 17:24






  • 1





    @Devid, ever heard anything from them? I have Office 2016 on Windows 10, and my effort to import a SVG produces only a gray picture frame icon.

    – katriel
    Aug 16 '17 at 13:23








  • 2





    @katriel I have know the version 1707 (Build 8326.2073) of Office 2016. I tested it with this SVG image: s.cdpn.io/3/kiwi.svg and it works. I tested it by drag and drop.

    – Devid
    Aug 16 '17 at 13:55






  • 1





    According to the support.office.com article linked to in this answer - "This feature is only available if you have an Office 365 subscription". I don't have an Office 365 subscription, so this doesn't work for me, even though I'm using Office Professional Plus 2016 on Windows 10.

    – Daniel Schilling
    Sep 27 '17 at 21:09



















3














I am using word 2013 and thus I cannot import svg directly. However, LibreOffice is capable of doing that. I am using LibreOffice 5 and I could import the svg file with



insert -> image -> choose your file


After that I just copied the imported svg from LibreOffice to Office. It seems like quality changed a bit, but for purposes that was fine.






share|improve this answer































    0














    It's also possible to copy-paste objects from Inkscape to Word directly. However, they are imported as raster image, I suppose Jpg-like. You can see an example below, in which I enlarged a detail to show the borders.



    enter image description here



    I have Inkscape 0.48, Microsoft Word 2010.






    share|improve this answer































      0














      How to copy and paste a diagram from Inkscape into Microsoft Word



      There is another simpler method which works all the time with all software, whatever age, including Mac OS.




      1. Select the diagram in Inkscape. Click on/select Black Arrow at top left of the page. Click on corner of the diagram you wish to move, then pull the cursor around the diagram so a black box surrounds the diagram.


      2. Select "Edit" → "Make a Bitmap copy". (This is halfway down the list with something like a camera next to it.) Click on it. A lot of dotted lines appear around your Inkscape diagram.



      Now this is the trick.




      1. Select "Edit" → "Copy". (Not "Make Bitmap copy". Doing this twice confuses some people.) Click.


      2. Then open your Word document.


      3. Click your cursor where you want to put the diagram.


      4. In the Word document go to "Edit" → "Paste". Click.


      5. Voila! Your diagram appears in the Word document with a box and handles around it.


      6. Resize if necessary by selecting and dragging the bottom right corner, and move by selecting box and dragging.


      7. Click. Box disappears. All done. Save.







      share|improve this answer


























      • The image looks blurred. Does word still handle the image as vector graphic ? How come Word 2016 still doesn't support SVG ?

        – chmike
        Jun 13 '16 at 15:19






      • 1





        @chmike The "Make Bitmap copy" step would give this away as exporting raster, not vector. I have no answer to your second question, even 3 years later. :)

        – Aaron Campbell
        Oct 7 '16 at 21:05



















      0














      Another solution is to use Gimp, it can read SVG files and export them in PNG format.






      share|improve this answer
























      • This would work, but will produce a rasterized image, and may not print well.

        – Stephen McAteer
        Aug 16 '16 at 1:11











      Your Answer








      StackExchange.ready(function() {
      var channelOptions = {
      tags: "".split(" "),
      id: "3"
      };
      initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

      StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
      // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
      if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
      StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
      createEditor();
      });
      }
      else {
      createEditor();
      }
      });

      function createEditor() {
      StackExchange.prepareEditor({
      heartbeatType: 'answer',
      autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
      convertImagesToLinks: true,
      noModals: true,
      showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
      reputationToPostImages: 10,
      bindNavPrevention: true,
      postfix: "",
      imageUploader: {
      brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
      contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
      allowUrls: true
      },
      onDemand: true,
      discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
      ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
      });


      }
      });














      draft saved

      draft discarded


















      StackExchange.ready(
      function () {
      StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fsuperuser.com%2fquestions%2f397644%2finserting-svg-files-in-a-microsoft-word-document%23new-answer', 'question_page');
      }
      );

      Post as a guest















      Required, but never shown

























      6 Answers
      6






      active

      oldest

      votes








      6 Answers
      6






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      73














      To embed an Inkscape drawing into a Word document:





      1. Open the file in Inkscape.



        open




      2. Save the file as an Enhanced Metafile (.emf).



        save as




      3. Be sure to untick Convert text to paths



        text to paths




      4. Insert the .emf file as a picture in a Word document.



        insertpicture






      To edit the drawing and text:





      1. Right-click the picture and select Edit Picture.



        edit




      2. Click Yes to convert to a drawing object.



        object




      3. Tada!



        complete








      share|improve this answer



















      • 4





        EMF export is only supported on Windows: wiki.inkscape.org/wiki/index.php/Release_notes/0.45#EMF_export

        – domen
        Mar 14 '13 at 15:16











      • This works also for OpenOffice/LibreOffice Draw ODG files. Thanks.

        – Greg
        Jun 12 '14 at 1:02






      • 1





        You can, if you want to import arbitrary SVG files platform-independent, convert them online

        – RAnders00
        Feb 3 '16 at 15:57











      • Mac supports only wmf types, not emf. At least there is a solution.

        – chmike
        Oct 8 '16 at 7:18






      • 2





        Export to EMF worked in Inkscape-0.91 on Ubuntu-16.04/Linux. (not MS-Windows-only feature now - may have been at the time of the prior comment.)

        – Randall Whitman
        Sep 19 '17 at 19:45
















      73














      To embed an Inkscape drawing into a Word document:





      1. Open the file in Inkscape.



        open




      2. Save the file as an Enhanced Metafile (.emf).



        save as




      3. Be sure to untick Convert text to paths



        text to paths




      4. Insert the .emf file as a picture in a Word document.



        insertpicture






      To edit the drawing and text:





      1. Right-click the picture and select Edit Picture.



        edit




      2. Click Yes to convert to a drawing object.



        object




      3. Tada!



        complete








      share|improve this answer



















      • 4





        EMF export is only supported on Windows: wiki.inkscape.org/wiki/index.php/Release_notes/0.45#EMF_export

        – domen
        Mar 14 '13 at 15:16











      • This works also for OpenOffice/LibreOffice Draw ODG files. Thanks.

        – Greg
        Jun 12 '14 at 1:02






      • 1





        You can, if you want to import arbitrary SVG files platform-independent, convert them online

        – RAnders00
        Feb 3 '16 at 15:57











      • Mac supports only wmf types, not emf. At least there is a solution.

        – chmike
        Oct 8 '16 at 7:18






      • 2





        Export to EMF worked in Inkscape-0.91 on Ubuntu-16.04/Linux. (not MS-Windows-only feature now - may have been at the time of the prior comment.)

        – Randall Whitman
        Sep 19 '17 at 19:45














      73












      73








      73







      To embed an Inkscape drawing into a Word document:





      1. Open the file in Inkscape.



        open




      2. Save the file as an Enhanced Metafile (.emf).



        save as




      3. Be sure to untick Convert text to paths



        text to paths




      4. Insert the .emf file as a picture in a Word document.



        insertpicture






      To edit the drawing and text:





      1. Right-click the picture and select Edit Picture.



        edit




      2. Click Yes to convert to a drawing object.



        object




      3. Tada!



        complete








      share|improve this answer













      To embed an Inkscape drawing into a Word document:





      1. Open the file in Inkscape.



        open




      2. Save the file as an Enhanced Metafile (.emf).



        save as




      3. Be sure to untick Convert text to paths



        text to paths




      4. Insert the .emf file as a picture in a Word document.



        insertpicture






      To edit the drawing and text:





      1. Right-click the picture and select Edit Picture.



        edit




      2. Click Yes to convert to a drawing object.



        object




      3. Tada!



        complete









      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered Mar 6 '12 at 20:06









      iglvzxiglvzx

      19.5k1167112




      19.5k1167112








      • 4





        EMF export is only supported on Windows: wiki.inkscape.org/wiki/index.php/Release_notes/0.45#EMF_export

        – domen
        Mar 14 '13 at 15:16











      • This works also for OpenOffice/LibreOffice Draw ODG files. Thanks.

        – Greg
        Jun 12 '14 at 1:02






      • 1





        You can, if you want to import arbitrary SVG files platform-independent, convert them online

        – RAnders00
        Feb 3 '16 at 15:57











      • Mac supports only wmf types, not emf. At least there is a solution.

        – chmike
        Oct 8 '16 at 7:18






      • 2





        Export to EMF worked in Inkscape-0.91 on Ubuntu-16.04/Linux. (not MS-Windows-only feature now - may have been at the time of the prior comment.)

        – Randall Whitman
        Sep 19 '17 at 19:45














      • 4





        EMF export is only supported on Windows: wiki.inkscape.org/wiki/index.php/Release_notes/0.45#EMF_export

        – domen
        Mar 14 '13 at 15:16











      • This works also for OpenOffice/LibreOffice Draw ODG files. Thanks.

        – Greg
        Jun 12 '14 at 1:02






      • 1





        You can, if you want to import arbitrary SVG files platform-independent, convert them online

        – RAnders00
        Feb 3 '16 at 15:57











      • Mac supports only wmf types, not emf. At least there is a solution.

        – chmike
        Oct 8 '16 at 7:18






      • 2





        Export to EMF worked in Inkscape-0.91 on Ubuntu-16.04/Linux. (not MS-Windows-only feature now - may have been at the time of the prior comment.)

        – Randall Whitman
        Sep 19 '17 at 19:45








      4




      4





      EMF export is only supported on Windows: wiki.inkscape.org/wiki/index.php/Release_notes/0.45#EMF_export

      – domen
      Mar 14 '13 at 15:16





      EMF export is only supported on Windows: wiki.inkscape.org/wiki/index.php/Release_notes/0.45#EMF_export

      – domen
      Mar 14 '13 at 15:16













      This works also for OpenOffice/LibreOffice Draw ODG files. Thanks.

      – Greg
      Jun 12 '14 at 1:02





      This works also for OpenOffice/LibreOffice Draw ODG files. Thanks.

      – Greg
      Jun 12 '14 at 1:02




      1




      1





      You can, if you want to import arbitrary SVG files platform-independent, convert them online

      – RAnders00
      Feb 3 '16 at 15:57





      You can, if you want to import arbitrary SVG files platform-independent, convert them online

      – RAnders00
      Feb 3 '16 at 15:57













      Mac supports only wmf types, not emf. At least there is a solution.

      – chmike
      Oct 8 '16 at 7:18





      Mac supports only wmf types, not emf. At least there is a solution.

      – chmike
      Oct 8 '16 at 7:18




      2




      2





      Export to EMF worked in Inkscape-0.91 on Ubuntu-16.04/Linux. (not MS-Windows-only feature now - may have been at the time of the prior comment.)

      – Randall Whitman
      Sep 19 '17 at 19:45





      Export to EMF worked in Inkscape-0.91 on Ubuntu-16.04/Linux. (not MS-Windows-only feature now - may have been at the time of the prior comment.)

      – Randall Whitman
      Sep 19 '17 at 19:45













      19














      2016 Update




      Note: This feature is only available if you have an Office 365 subscription. If you are an Office 365 subscriber, make sure you
      have the latest version of Office.




      Microsoft Word 2016 can now directly import SVG:




      1. Place your cursor where you'd like the image to be inserted.

      2. Go to the Insert tab of the Ribbon.


      3. Click Pictures



        enter image description here



      4. Navigate to where the SVG file you wish to insert is located and
        select it. Click Insert.



      Source: Insert SVG images in Microsoft Office



      What's particularly cool is that looking under the covers reveals that SVG is being stored natively within the OOXML. This is much better for image quality preservation than importing to a raster format would be, and is more interoperable than EMF/WMF.



      Platforms: SVG import unfortunately does not appear to be supported on the Mac platform or on Word Online as of this writing (August 2017).



      2019 Update



      SVG import is now supported on Mac, confirmed with an Office 365 subscription at least.






      share|improve this answer





















      • 3





        This does not work for me although I have the latest updates installed on my Word 2016 (64Bit).

        – Devid
        Feb 11 '17 at 10:26






      • 5





        I have Office 2016 64Bit (16.07668.7101). When I try to insert a SVG image I get the message: "An error occurred while importing this file.". I have Windows 10 and I did file a report on Feedback Hub App, the title is: Word 2016 does not Insert SVG images

        – Devid
        Feb 11 '17 at 17:24






      • 1





        @Devid, ever heard anything from them? I have Office 2016 on Windows 10, and my effort to import a SVG produces only a gray picture frame icon.

        – katriel
        Aug 16 '17 at 13:23








      • 2





        @katriel I have know the version 1707 (Build 8326.2073) of Office 2016. I tested it with this SVG image: s.cdpn.io/3/kiwi.svg and it works. I tested it by drag and drop.

        – Devid
        Aug 16 '17 at 13:55






      • 1





        According to the support.office.com article linked to in this answer - "This feature is only available if you have an Office 365 subscription". I don't have an Office 365 subscription, so this doesn't work for me, even though I'm using Office Professional Plus 2016 on Windows 10.

        – Daniel Schilling
        Sep 27 '17 at 21:09
















      19














      2016 Update




      Note: This feature is only available if you have an Office 365 subscription. If you are an Office 365 subscriber, make sure you
      have the latest version of Office.




      Microsoft Word 2016 can now directly import SVG:




      1. Place your cursor where you'd like the image to be inserted.

      2. Go to the Insert tab of the Ribbon.


      3. Click Pictures



        enter image description here



      4. Navigate to where the SVG file you wish to insert is located and
        select it. Click Insert.



      Source: Insert SVG images in Microsoft Office



      What's particularly cool is that looking under the covers reveals that SVG is being stored natively within the OOXML. This is much better for image quality preservation than importing to a raster format would be, and is more interoperable than EMF/WMF.



      Platforms: SVG import unfortunately does not appear to be supported on the Mac platform or on Word Online as of this writing (August 2017).



      2019 Update



      SVG import is now supported on Mac, confirmed with an Office 365 subscription at least.






      share|improve this answer





















      • 3





        This does not work for me although I have the latest updates installed on my Word 2016 (64Bit).

        – Devid
        Feb 11 '17 at 10:26






      • 5





        I have Office 2016 64Bit (16.07668.7101). When I try to insert a SVG image I get the message: "An error occurred while importing this file.". I have Windows 10 and I did file a report on Feedback Hub App, the title is: Word 2016 does not Insert SVG images

        – Devid
        Feb 11 '17 at 17:24






      • 1





        @Devid, ever heard anything from them? I have Office 2016 on Windows 10, and my effort to import a SVG produces only a gray picture frame icon.

        – katriel
        Aug 16 '17 at 13:23








      • 2





        @katriel I have know the version 1707 (Build 8326.2073) of Office 2016. I tested it with this SVG image: s.cdpn.io/3/kiwi.svg and it works. I tested it by drag and drop.

        – Devid
        Aug 16 '17 at 13:55






      • 1





        According to the support.office.com article linked to in this answer - "This feature is only available if you have an Office 365 subscription". I don't have an Office 365 subscription, so this doesn't work for me, even though I'm using Office Professional Plus 2016 on Windows 10.

        – Daniel Schilling
        Sep 27 '17 at 21:09














      19












      19








      19







      2016 Update




      Note: This feature is only available if you have an Office 365 subscription. If you are an Office 365 subscriber, make sure you
      have the latest version of Office.




      Microsoft Word 2016 can now directly import SVG:




      1. Place your cursor where you'd like the image to be inserted.

      2. Go to the Insert tab of the Ribbon.


      3. Click Pictures



        enter image description here



      4. Navigate to where the SVG file you wish to insert is located and
        select it. Click Insert.



      Source: Insert SVG images in Microsoft Office



      What's particularly cool is that looking under the covers reveals that SVG is being stored natively within the OOXML. This is much better for image quality preservation than importing to a raster format would be, and is more interoperable than EMF/WMF.



      Platforms: SVG import unfortunately does not appear to be supported on the Mac platform or on Word Online as of this writing (August 2017).



      2019 Update



      SVG import is now supported on Mac, confirmed with an Office 365 subscription at least.






      share|improve this answer















      2016 Update




      Note: This feature is only available if you have an Office 365 subscription. If you are an Office 365 subscriber, make sure you
      have the latest version of Office.




      Microsoft Word 2016 can now directly import SVG:




      1. Place your cursor where you'd like the image to be inserted.

      2. Go to the Insert tab of the Ribbon.


      3. Click Pictures



        enter image description here



      4. Navigate to where the SVG file you wish to insert is located and
        select it. Click Insert.



      Source: Insert SVG images in Microsoft Office



      What's particularly cool is that looking under the covers reveals that SVG is being stored natively within the OOXML. This is much better for image quality preservation than importing to a raster format would be, and is more interoperable than EMF/WMF.



      Platforms: SVG import unfortunately does not appear to be supported on the Mac platform or on Word Online as of this writing (August 2017).



      2019 Update



      SVG import is now supported on Mac, confirmed with an Office 365 subscription at least.







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited Jan 26 at 21:01

























      answered Jan 24 '17 at 22:38









      kjhugheskjhughes

      29326




      29326








      • 3





        This does not work for me although I have the latest updates installed on my Word 2016 (64Bit).

        – Devid
        Feb 11 '17 at 10:26






      • 5





        I have Office 2016 64Bit (16.07668.7101). When I try to insert a SVG image I get the message: "An error occurred while importing this file.". I have Windows 10 and I did file a report on Feedback Hub App, the title is: Word 2016 does not Insert SVG images

        – Devid
        Feb 11 '17 at 17:24






      • 1





        @Devid, ever heard anything from them? I have Office 2016 on Windows 10, and my effort to import a SVG produces only a gray picture frame icon.

        – katriel
        Aug 16 '17 at 13:23








      • 2





        @katriel I have know the version 1707 (Build 8326.2073) of Office 2016. I tested it with this SVG image: s.cdpn.io/3/kiwi.svg and it works. I tested it by drag and drop.

        – Devid
        Aug 16 '17 at 13:55






      • 1





        According to the support.office.com article linked to in this answer - "This feature is only available if you have an Office 365 subscription". I don't have an Office 365 subscription, so this doesn't work for me, even though I'm using Office Professional Plus 2016 on Windows 10.

        – Daniel Schilling
        Sep 27 '17 at 21:09














      • 3





        This does not work for me although I have the latest updates installed on my Word 2016 (64Bit).

        – Devid
        Feb 11 '17 at 10:26






      • 5





        I have Office 2016 64Bit (16.07668.7101). When I try to insert a SVG image I get the message: "An error occurred while importing this file.". I have Windows 10 and I did file a report on Feedback Hub App, the title is: Word 2016 does not Insert SVG images

        – Devid
        Feb 11 '17 at 17:24






      • 1





        @Devid, ever heard anything from them? I have Office 2016 on Windows 10, and my effort to import a SVG produces only a gray picture frame icon.

        – katriel
        Aug 16 '17 at 13:23








      • 2





        @katriel I have know the version 1707 (Build 8326.2073) of Office 2016. I tested it with this SVG image: s.cdpn.io/3/kiwi.svg and it works. I tested it by drag and drop.

        – Devid
        Aug 16 '17 at 13:55






      • 1





        According to the support.office.com article linked to in this answer - "This feature is only available if you have an Office 365 subscription". I don't have an Office 365 subscription, so this doesn't work for me, even though I'm using Office Professional Plus 2016 on Windows 10.

        – Daniel Schilling
        Sep 27 '17 at 21:09








      3




      3





      This does not work for me although I have the latest updates installed on my Word 2016 (64Bit).

      – Devid
      Feb 11 '17 at 10:26





      This does not work for me although I have the latest updates installed on my Word 2016 (64Bit).

      – Devid
      Feb 11 '17 at 10:26




      5




      5





      I have Office 2016 64Bit (16.07668.7101). When I try to insert a SVG image I get the message: "An error occurred while importing this file.". I have Windows 10 and I did file a report on Feedback Hub App, the title is: Word 2016 does not Insert SVG images

      – Devid
      Feb 11 '17 at 17:24





      I have Office 2016 64Bit (16.07668.7101). When I try to insert a SVG image I get the message: "An error occurred while importing this file.". I have Windows 10 and I did file a report on Feedback Hub App, the title is: Word 2016 does not Insert SVG images

      – Devid
      Feb 11 '17 at 17:24




      1




      1





      @Devid, ever heard anything from them? I have Office 2016 on Windows 10, and my effort to import a SVG produces only a gray picture frame icon.

      – katriel
      Aug 16 '17 at 13:23







      @Devid, ever heard anything from them? I have Office 2016 on Windows 10, and my effort to import a SVG produces only a gray picture frame icon.

      – katriel
      Aug 16 '17 at 13:23






      2




      2





      @katriel I have know the version 1707 (Build 8326.2073) of Office 2016. I tested it with this SVG image: s.cdpn.io/3/kiwi.svg and it works. I tested it by drag and drop.

      – Devid
      Aug 16 '17 at 13:55





      @katriel I have know the version 1707 (Build 8326.2073) of Office 2016. I tested it with this SVG image: s.cdpn.io/3/kiwi.svg and it works. I tested it by drag and drop.

      – Devid
      Aug 16 '17 at 13:55




      1




      1





      According to the support.office.com article linked to in this answer - "This feature is only available if you have an Office 365 subscription". I don't have an Office 365 subscription, so this doesn't work for me, even though I'm using Office Professional Plus 2016 on Windows 10.

      – Daniel Schilling
      Sep 27 '17 at 21:09





      According to the support.office.com article linked to in this answer - "This feature is only available if you have an Office 365 subscription". I don't have an Office 365 subscription, so this doesn't work for me, even though I'm using Office Professional Plus 2016 on Windows 10.

      – Daniel Schilling
      Sep 27 '17 at 21:09











      3














      I am using word 2013 and thus I cannot import svg directly. However, LibreOffice is capable of doing that. I am using LibreOffice 5 and I could import the svg file with



      insert -> image -> choose your file


      After that I just copied the imported svg from LibreOffice to Office. It seems like quality changed a bit, but for purposes that was fine.






      share|improve this answer




























        3














        I am using word 2013 and thus I cannot import svg directly. However, LibreOffice is capable of doing that. I am using LibreOffice 5 and I could import the svg file with



        insert -> image -> choose your file


        After that I just copied the imported svg from LibreOffice to Office. It seems like quality changed a bit, but for purposes that was fine.






        share|improve this answer


























          3












          3








          3







          I am using word 2013 and thus I cannot import svg directly. However, LibreOffice is capable of doing that. I am using LibreOffice 5 and I could import the svg file with



          insert -> image -> choose your file


          After that I just copied the imported svg from LibreOffice to Office. It seems like quality changed a bit, but for purposes that was fine.






          share|improve this answer













          I am using word 2013 and thus I cannot import svg directly. However, LibreOffice is capable of doing that. I am using LibreOffice 5 and I could import the svg file with



          insert -> image -> choose your file


          After that I just copied the imported svg from LibreOffice to Office. It seems like quality changed a bit, but for purposes that was fine.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Jul 23 '17 at 11:52









          LetschLetsch

          311




          311























              0














              It's also possible to copy-paste objects from Inkscape to Word directly. However, they are imported as raster image, I suppose Jpg-like. You can see an example below, in which I enlarged a detail to show the borders.



              enter image description here



              I have Inkscape 0.48, Microsoft Word 2010.






              share|improve this answer




























                0














                It's also possible to copy-paste objects from Inkscape to Word directly. However, they are imported as raster image, I suppose Jpg-like. You can see an example below, in which I enlarged a detail to show the borders.



                enter image description here



                I have Inkscape 0.48, Microsoft Word 2010.






                share|improve this answer


























                  0












                  0








                  0







                  It's also possible to copy-paste objects from Inkscape to Word directly. However, they are imported as raster image, I suppose Jpg-like. You can see an example below, in which I enlarged a detail to show the borders.



                  enter image description here



                  I have Inkscape 0.48, Microsoft Word 2010.






                  share|improve this answer













                  It's also possible to copy-paste objects from Inkscape to Word directly. However, they are imported as raster image, I suppose Jpg-like. You can see an example below, in which I enlarged a detail to show the borders.



                  enter image description here



                  I have Inkscape 0.48, Microsoft Word 2010.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Sep 12 '13 at 14:50









                  clabacchioclabacchio

                  2892521




                  2892521























                      0














                      How to copy and paste a diagram from Inkscape into Microsoft Word



                      There is another simpler method which works all the time with all software, whatever age, including Mac OS.




                      1. Select the diagram in Inkscape. Click on/select Black Arrow at top left of the page. Click on corner of the diagram you wish to move, then pull the cursor around the diagram so a black box surrounds the diagram.


                      2. Select "Edit" → "Make a Bitmap copy". (This is halfway down the list with something like a camera next to it.) Click on it. A lot of dotted lines appear around your Inkscape diagram.



                      Now this is the trick.




                      1. Select "Edit" → "Copy". (Not "Make Bitmap copy". Doing this twice confuses some people.) Click.


                      2. Then open your Word document.


                      3. Click your cursor where you want to put the diagram.


                      4. In the Word document go to "Edit" → "Paste". Click.


                      5. Voila! Your diagram appears in the Word document with a box and handles around it.


                      6. Resize if necessary by selecting and dragging the bottom right corner, and move by selecting box and dragging.


                      7. Click. Box disappears. All done. Save.







                      share|improve this answer


























                      • The image looks blurred. Does word still handle the image as vector graphic ? How come Word 2016 still doesn't support SVG ?

                        – chmike
                        Jun 13 '16 at 15:19






                      • 1





                        @chmike The "Make Bitmap copy" step would give this away as exporting raster, not vector. I have no answer to your second question, even 3 years later. :)

                        – Aaron Campbell
                        Oct 7 '16 at 21:05
















                      0














                      How to copy and paste a diagram from Inkscape into Microsoft Word



                      There is another simpler method which works all the time with all software, whatever age, including Mac OS.




                      1. Select the diagram in Inkscape. Click on/select Black Arrow at top left of the page. Click on corner of the diagram you wish to move, then pull the cursor around the diagram so a black box surrounds the diagram.


                      2. Select "Edit" → "Make a Bitmap copy". (This is halfway down the list with something like a camera next to it.) Click on it. A lot of dotted lines appear around your Inkscape diagram.



                      Now this is the trick.




                      1. Select "Edit" → "Copy". (Not "Make Bitmap copy". Doing this twice confuses some people.) Click.


                      2. Then open your Word document.


                      3. Click your cursor where you want to put the diagram.


                      4. In the Word document go to "Edit" → "Paste". Click.


                      5. Voila! Your diagram appears in the Word document with a box and handles around it.


                      6. Resize if necessary by selecting and dragging the bottom right corner, and move by selecting box and dragging.


                      7. Click. Box disappears. All done. Save.







                      share|improve this answer


























                      • The image looks blurred. Does word still handle the image as vector graphic ? How come Word 2016 still doesn't support SVG ?

                        – chmike
                        Jun 13 '16 at 15:19






                      • 1





                        @chmike The "Make Bitmap copy" step would give this away as exporting raster, not vector. I have no answer to your second question, even 3 years later. :)

                        – Aaron Campbell
                        Oct 7 '16 at 21:05














                      0












                      0








                      0







                      How to copy and paste a diagram from Inkscape into Microsoft Word



                      There is another simpler method which works all the time with all software, whatever age, including Mac OS.




                      1. Select the diagram in Inkscape. Click on/select Black Arrow at top left of the page. Click on corner of the diagram you wish to move, then pull the cursor around the diagram so a black box surrounds the diagram.


                      2. Select "Edit" → "Make a Bitmap copy". (This is halfway down the list with something like a camera next to it.) Click on it. A lot of dotted lines appear around your Inkscape diagram.



                      Now this is the trick.




                      1. Select "Edit" → "Copy". (Not "Make Bitmap copy". Doing this twice confuses some people.) Click.


                      2. Then open your Word document.


                      3. Click your cursor where you want to put the diagram.


                      4. In the Word document go to "Edit" → "Paste". Click.


                      5. Voila! Your diagram appears in the Word document with a box and handles around it.


                      6. Resize if necessary by selecting and dragging the bottom right corner, and move by selecting box and dragging.


                      7. Click. Box disappears. All done. Save.







                      share|improve this answer















                      How to copy and paste a diagram from Inkscape into Microsoft Word



                      There is another simpler method which works all the time with all software, whatever age, including Mac OS.




                      1. Select the diagram in Inkscape. Click on/select Black Arrow at top left of the page. Click on corner of the diagram you wish to move, then pull the cursor around the diagram so a black box surrounds the diagram.


                      2. Select "Edit" → "Make a Bitmap copy". (This is halfway down the list with something like a camera next to it.) Click on it. A lot of dotted lines appear around your Inkscape diagram.



                      Now this is the trick.




                      1. Select "Edit" → "Copy". (Not "Make Bitmap copy". Doing this twice confuses some people.) Click.


                      2. Then open your Word document.


                      3. Click your cursor where you want to put the diagram.


                      4. In the Word document go to "Edit" → "Paste". Click.


                      5. Voila! Your diagram appears in the Word document with a box and handles around it.


                      6. Resize if necessary by selecting and dragging the bottom right corner, and move by selecting box and dragging.


                      7. Click. Box disappears. All done. Save.








                      share|improve this answer














                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer








                      edited Apr 24 '15 at 3:44









                      G-Man

                      5,657112359




                      5,657112359










                      answered Apr 24 '15 at 2:20









                      TimTim

                      1




                      1













                      • The image looks blurred. Does word still handle the image as vector graphic ? How come Word 2016 still doesn't support SVG ?

                        – chmike
                        Jun 13 '16 at 15:19






                      • 1





                        @chmike The "Make Bitmap copy" step would give this away as exporting raster, not vector. I have no answer to your second question, even 3 years later. :)

                        – Aaron Campbell
                        Oct 7 '16 at 21:05



















                      • The image looks blurred. Does word still handle the image as vector graphic ? How come Word 2016 still doesn't support SVG ?

                        – chmike
                        Jun 13 '16 at 15:19






                      • 1





                        @chmike The "Make Bitmap copy" step would give this away as exporting raster, not vector. I have no answer to your second question, even 3 years later. :)

                        – Aaron Campbell
                        Oct 7 '16 at 21:05

















                      The image looks blurred. Does word still handle the image as vector graphic ? How come Word 2016 still doesn't support SVG ?

                      – chmike
                      Jun 13 '16 at 15:19





                      The image looks blurred. Does word still handle the image as vector graphic ? How come Word 2016 still doesn't support SVG ?

                      – chmike
                      Jun 13 '16 at 15:19




                      1




                      1





                      @chmike The "Make Bitmap copy" step would give this away as exporting raster, not vector. I have no answer to your second question, even 3 years later. :)

                      – Aaron Campbell
                      Oct 7 '16 at 21:05





                      @chmike The "Make Bitmap copy" step would give this away as exporting raster, not vector. I have no answer to your second question, even 3 years later. :)

                      – Aaron Campbell
                      Oct 7 '16 at 21:05











                      0














                      Another solution is to use Gimp, it can read SVG files and export them in PNG format.






                      share|improve this answer
























                      • This would work, but will produce a rasterized image, and may not print well.

                        – Stephen McAteer
                        Aug 16 '16 at 1:11
















                      0














                      Another solution is to use Gimp, it can read SVG files and export them in PNG format.






                      share|improve this answer
























                      • This would work, but will produce a rasterized image, and may not print well.

                        – Stephen McAteer
                        Aug 16 '16 at 1:11














                      0












                      0








                      0







                      Another solution is to use Gimp, it can read SVG files and export them in PNG format.






                      share|improve this answer













                      Another solution is to use Gimp, it can read SVG files and export them in PNG format.







                      share|improve this answer












                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer










                      answered Jan 8 '16 at 11:53









                      ZacZac

                      28234




                      28234













                      • This would work, but will produce a rasterized image, and may not print well.

                        – Stephen McAteer
                        Aug 16 '16 at 1:11



















                      • This would work, but will produce a rasterized image, and may not print well.

                        – Stephen McAteer
                        Aug 16 '16 at 1:11

















                      This would work, but will produce a rasterized image, and may not print well.

                      – Stephen McAteer
                      Aug 16 '16 at 1:11





                      This would work, but will produce a rasterized image, and may not print well.

                      – Stephen McAteer
                      Aug 16 '16 at 1:11


















                      draft saved

                      draft discarded




















































                      Thanks for contributing an answer to Super User!


                      • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                      But avoid



                      • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                      • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


                      To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




                      draft saved


                      draft discarded














                      StackExchange.ready(
                      function () {
                      StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fsuperuser.com%2fquestions%2f397644%2finserting-svg-files-in-a-microsoft-word-document%23new-answer', 'question_page');
                      }
                      );

                      Post as a guest















                      Required, but never shown





















































                      Required, but never shown














                      Required, but never shown












                      Required, but never shown







                      Required, but never shown

































                      Required, but never shown














                      Required, but never shown












                      Required, but never shown







                      Required, but never shown







                      Popular posts from this blog

                      Сан-Квентин

                      8-я гвардейская общевойсковая армия

                      Алькесар