Convert Turtle to Markdown.
Drop a .ttl file and get its RDF triples as clean, readable Markdown. It runs entirely in your browser, so your file never leaves your device.
Drag & drop your files
or
Optimize for AI & RAG
Extra cleanup for LLM ingestion: strip HTML, fix smart quotes, tidy Unicode and spacing.
Add YAML front matter
Prepend a metadata block (title, source, date, word & token counts) for knowledge bases and RAG.
Add table of contents
Build a linked index from the headings. Handy for long documents.
Export RAG chunks (.json)
Split the result into retrieval-ready chunks. Download per file from the result panel.
Most converters quietly upload your documents to a server. This one physically can't.
Compact syntax,
scattered facts.
Turtle packs facts tightly with prefixes and semicolon and comma shorthand, which is great for machines but dense to read. Converting collects each subject into a plain heading with bulleted facts.
@prefix foaf: <http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/> .
@prefix ex: <http://example.org/> .
ex:alice a foaf:Person ;
foaf:name "Alice Lee" ;
foaf:knows ex:bob .
## alice
- **type:** Person
- **name:** Alice Lee
- **knows:** bob
Everything you
actually need.
Turtle triples in, readable Markdown out, with no server and no account anywhere.
It never leaves your browser
Your .ttl is read and parsed on your device, then turned into Markdown. Nothing is uploaded to any server, ever.
# Heading
- point one
3 chunks
AI & RAG ready
Optional cleanup, YAML front matter, a table of contents and RAG chunk export.
Works offline
Once the page has loaded you can switch off your connection and it keeps converting.
## alice
- name: Alice Lee
- knows: bob
Grouped by subject
Triples that share a subject are gathered under one heading, with each predicate and object as a bullet.
Unicode safe
Accents, symbols and non-Latin scripts come through intact as UTF-8.
Free, and unlimited
No sign-up, no quotas, no watermarks. Convert one file or a thousand; it all runs the same way, on your own device.
From triples
to headings.
Honest about what comes through, and what doesn't. These are the same notes the Formats list shows for Turtle, so the page never drifts from what the converter really does.
Kept
4- Subjects as headings
- Predicates and objects as bullets
- URIs shortened to the last segment
- Literal values
Dropped
3- @prefix declarations
- Datatypes (^^xsd)
- Language tags (@en)
foaf:name "Alice Lee"
foaf:knows ex:bob
Turtle questions,
answered.
Everything worth knowing before you drop in a .ttl file.
Other converters.
Working with more than Turtle? These convert the same way: privately, in your browser.
Java to Markdown
.java
Java source code.
C / C++ to Markdown
.c · .cpp · .h
C and C++ source code.
C# to Markdown
.cs
C# source code.
Go to Markdown
.go
Go source code.
Rust to Markdown
.rs
Rust source code.
PHP to Markdown
.php
PHP source code.
Ruby to Markdown
.rb
Ruby source code.
SQL to Markdown
.sql
SQL queries & schemas.