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 | |||||
TBZ2 - Extension Details | |||||
Date Added: | March 11, 2008 | ||||
File Extension: | .TBZ2 | ||||
Description 1: | .TBZ2 stands for Tar BZip 2 Compressed file. It is a file archive that is compressed with both .BZ2 and .TAR compression. This type of file is often seen on Unix computer systems. Use Bzip 2 decompression to decompress TBZ2 files. From here, extract the files from the tar archive. | ||||
File Type: | Compressed file | ||||
Mode: | Binary | ||||
Program(s) to Open: | Windows: Corel WinZip, RARLAB WinRAR, Smith Micro Stuffit Deluxe Macintosh: RARLAB RAR for Mac OS X Unix: RARLAB RAR for Linux or FreeBSD | ||||
Common: | |||||
Extension: |
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