Use our free and fast online tool to convert your VSDX (Microsoft Visio) image or logo into 3D OBJ (Wavefront) mesh/model files suitable for printing with a 3D printer or for loading into your favorite 3D editing package.
Here are three simple steps to create an OBJ file from a VSDX file.
In the small, drafty attic of a house in Llandaff, a young boy named Roald sat perched on a trunk, his eyes wide as he listened to his mother’s tales. Sofie didn't tell stories of logic or dull lessons; she spoke of Norwegian trolls that lived in the dark crevices of mountains and ancient magic hidden in the pine forests [1, 2].
School was a place of rigid rules and eccentric characters. At St. Peter’s, Roald learned the art of writing home every week, though he never dared tell his mother about the homesickness that felt like a cold stone in his stomach [4]. He transformed his surroundings into a theater of the absurd: the "Matron" who patrolled the hallways like a shark, and the legendary Captain Hardcastle, whose mustache seemed to quiver with pure malice [3, 4].
From the terrifying "operation" on his adenoids without anesthesia to the thrill of driving his family's first motor car, Roald’s childhood was a mosaic of the marvelous and the miserable [1, 4]. He didn’t just grow up; he collected moments of wonder and fear, storing them away until they eventually spilled out onto yellow legal pads, turning his own life into the greatest story of all [2, 6].
Later, at Repton, life took a bizarrely delicious turn. Every so often, a plain grey cardboard box would arrive from [4, 5]. Inside were twelve new chocolate bars, each a top-secret invention waiting for a grade. Roald would sit, pencil in hand, imagining himself as a professional taster in a vast, gleaming laboratory—the very dream that would one day grow into a factory owned by a man named Willy Wonka [5].
These were the seeds of Roald’s world, but the reality of his childhood was often far more jagged. There was the , born from a deep-seated grudge against the mean, child-hating Mrs. Pratchett [3, 4]. Roald and his friends, fueled by a mix of terror and adrenaline, slipped a dead mouse into one of her candy jars [3]. The victory was sweet until the cane of the headmaster, Mr. Coombes, delivered a sharp, stinging reminder of the price of mischief [4].
| Extension | VSDX |
| Full Name | Microsoft Visio |
| Type | Vector |
| Mime Type | application/octet-stream |
| Format | Binary |
| Tools | VSDX Converters, VSDX Viewer |
| Open With | Inkscape |
The VSDX format is the official file format used by Microsoft Visio, an application specializing in creating floor plans, flow charts, organization charts, and other vector-based charts.
The format has been around since the early 1990s, and like other Microsoft applications, VSDX files have evolved over the years. VSDX files can be opened in Microsoft Visio, and many other vector-based programs offer support for importing VSDX files for editing.
| Extension | OBJ |
| Full Name | Wavefront |
| Type | 3D Model |
| Mime Type | text/plain |
| Format | Text |
| Tools | OBJ Converters, 3D Model Voxelizer, Create OBJ Animation, Compress OBJ, OBJ Asset Extractor, Text to OBJ, OBJ Viewer |
| Open With | Daz Studio, MeshLab, CAD Assistant |
The OBJ file format, originally created by Wavefront Technologies and later adopted by many other 3D software vendors, is a simple text-based file format for describing 3D models/geometry. This data can include vertices, faces, normals, texture coordinates, and references to external texture files.
As the format is text-based, it is relatively straightforward to parse in 3D modeling applications. A downside of the text-based format is that the files can be rather large compared to similar binary formats such as STL and compressed files such as 3MF.
Our tool will save any material and texture files separately; these additional files will be included with your final OBJ file at the time of download.
In the small, drafty attic of a house in Llandaff, a young boy named Roald sat perched on a trunk, his eyes wide as he listened to his mother’s tales. Sofie didn't tell stories of logic or dull lessons; she spoke of Norwegian trolls that lived in the dark crevices of mountains and ancient magic hidden in the pine forests [1, 2].
School was a place of rigid rules and eccentric characters. At St. Peter’s, Roald learned the art of writing home every week, though he never dared tell his mother about the homesickness that felt like a cold stone in his stomach [4]. He transformed his surroundings into a theater of the absurd: the "Matron" who patrolled the hallways like a shark, and the legendary Captain Hardcastle, whose mustache seemed to quiver with pure malice [3, 4]. Roald Dahl's Tales From Childhood
From the terrifying "operation" on his adenoids without anesthesia to the thrill of driving his family's first motor car, Roald’s childhood was a mosaic of the marvelous and the miserable [1, 4]. He didn’t just grow up; he collected moments of wonder and fear, storing them away until they eventually spilled out onto yellow legal pads, turning his own life into the greatest story of all [2, 6]. In the small, drafty attic of a house
Later, at Repton, life took a bizarrely delicious turn. Every so often, a plain grey cardboard box would arrive from [4, 5]. Inside were twelve new chocolate bars, each a top-secret invention waiting for a grade. Roald would sit, pencil in hand, imagining himself as a professional taster in a vast, gleaming laboratory—the very dream that would one day grow into a factory owned by a man named Willy Wonka [5]. From the terrifying "operation" on his adenoids without
These were the seeds of Roald’s world, but the reality of his childhood was often far more jagged. There was the , born from a deep-seated grudge against the mean, child-hating Mrs. Pratchett [3, 4]. Roald and his friends, fueled by a mix of terror and adrenaline, slipped a dead mouse into one of her candy jars [3]. The victory was sweet until the cane of the headmaster, Mr. Coombes, delivered a sharp, stinging reminder of the price of mischief [4].
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