What is a file extension?Short answer: it's the set of letters after the period (.) in the name of a file. Long answer: File extensions signify the file format of a file. It tells the operating system (OS) how data was stored in the file. Not all OS, require a file extension though. For instance, this is optional in Unix, but is mandatory with MS-DOS and Windows systems. In most file formats the file type is actually defined by the contents (first bytes, file structure), but extensions are used to define the application that is used for opening the file. Below is a detailed database of thousands of file extensions our team has compiled for you. Feel free to browse! |
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ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ | |||||
RGB - Extension Details | |||||
Date Added: | January 01, 1970 | ||||
File Extension: | .RGB | ||||
Description 1: | Silicon Graphics (SGI) is credited for creating the color bitmap image format that uses the .RGB file extension. You use this generic format to save RGB color images found on SGI workstations. This type of file format and extension are recognized by a variety of image viewing program applications. RGB files fall under the category of Raster Image files. | ||||
File Type: | Image file | ||||
Mode: | Binary | ||||
Program(s) to Open: | Windows: Corel Paint Shop Pro, XnView, The GIMP, Apple QuickTime Player Macintosh: XnView, Apple QuickTime Player, The GIMP Unix: The GIMP | ||||
Common: | |||||
Extension: |
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