07-01-21 12:47 PM
Answered! Go to Answer.
07-01-21 06:07 PM
To address your concern, you can save the Word file as web page. The embedded images will be extracted from the document, and placed in the same location where you saved the web page. From there, you can determine its image file type.
or
You could change the extension of a .docx or .docm document to .zip, then open the zip archive (which is what .docx & .docm files really are) and examine the images in the media folder directly - their types will be indicated by their extensions. Change the zip archive's extension back afterwards - or work on a copy of the document.
07-01-21 06:07 PM
To address your concern, you can save the Word file as web page. The embedded images will be extracted from the document, and placed in the same location where you saved the web page. From there, you can determine its image file type.
or
You could change the extension of a .docx or .docm document to .zip, then open the zip archive (which is what .docx & .docm files really are) and examine the images in the media folder directly - their types will be indicated by their extensions. Change the zip archive's extension back afterwards - or work on a copy of the document.
12-01-21 10:13 PM