& I'd like to let anyone who has come across this while searching for a solution know that the developer of the libmwaw library (& associated tools) very nicely updated the source and his mwawOSX app to enable created date/time inheritance for converted ClarisWorks files.Convert from CMYK: CMYK to AAI, CMYK to AVS, CMYK to CIN, CMYK to CMYKA, CMYK to DCX, CMYK to EPDF, CMYK to EPI, CMYK to EPS2, CMYK to EPS3, CMYK to EPSF and 49 more conversions.Ĭonvert to CMYK: AAI to CMYK, AVS to CMYK, CALS to CMYK, CGM to CMYK, CIN to CMYK, CMYKA to CMYK, CRW to CMYK, CUT to CMYK, DCM to CMYK, DCR to CMYK and 76 more conversions. What I'm hoping to find is a simple commandline tool that I can aim at entire folders of these documents to convert in place, with the ability to retain the Date/Time Created stamps. However, in practice, the batch function doesn't work and the script has no setting to retain the original Date/Time stamps. I've, also, attempted to use unoconv in conjunction with LibreOffice but have slammed against the brick wall of an unfixed bug from 2012.Īdditionally, I found this bash script, which purports to do exactly what I need.
I attempted to use the app DocumentConverter, but it crashes every time I try to export anything. I did find some freeware that will convert old WordPerfect docs to modern formats, but it doesn't work with my ClarisWorks docs. But I can't find an option to retain the original Date/Time Created stamps to the converted files. If you want to convert a MHT file to a Word document file with the DOC file extension, you can do so by using Microsoft Words save feature. Microsoft Word 2010 supports the MHT files and allows you to open, edit and print files with this extension. PNG is based on the best features of the predecessor, including lossless compression and transparent background support. A file saved as a single file Web page by certain Web browsers carries the MHT file extension. However, they are both raster image types. And the "soffice -headless" commandline tool allows one to attack entire directories. PNG is a scan-line graphic format developed as an alternative to GIF, a commercial license. LibreOffice is able to open the documents without all the weird crud and formatting issues that appear when opening them with other applications. They are unviewable with QuickLook and mdls identifies their type as CWWP. The documents appear in Finder without extensions and the system has given them exe icons despite categorizing them as Documents.
I'm running the current version of Sierra (10.12.5).