What is the difference between .pot and .pnm?
- Extension
- .pot
- .pnm
- Format
- Binary
- Binary
- Category
- Presentation
- Raster Image
- Developer
- Microsoft
- Jef Poskanzer
- Description
- The POT file format is associated with Microsoft PowerPoint, a well-known presentation software that is part of the Microsoft Office suite. A POT file is essentially a template file that contains pre-designed layout, styles, formatting, and sometimes background images or themes that can be used to create new PowerPoint presentations (PPT files) with a consistent look and feel. It serves as a blueprint for multiple presentations, allowing users to maintain uniformity in design across various slideshows without having to start from scratch each time.
- The PNM (Portable Any Map Image) file format is a subset of the broader Netpbm format, designed for storing various types of digital images. It acts as an umbrella term for three specific types of grayscale, color, and black-and-white images, represented by PBM (Portable Bitmap), PGM (Portable Graymap), and PPM (Portable Pixmap) formats respectively. PNM files are known for their simplicity and ease of conversion to other image formats.
- MIME Type
- text/plain
- application/x-portable-anymap
- Sample
- sample.pnm
- Wikipedia
- .pot on Wikipedia
- .pnm on Wikipedia