File Extension
file extension
ADMX
An .MSI file usually is a Microsoft Windows installation file, associated with "Windows Installer." It contains control information that identifies several installation criteria for a Windows application.
You can't play unsupported file extensions in Windows Movie Maker. You have to convert the file to a format compatible with the program.
From windows explorer, click the 'Tools' menu and select 'Folder Options.' On the 'View' tab, uncheck the box that says 'Hide extensions for known file types,' and hit 'OK.'
in windows 2000/xp and windows 9x
The file called "ntdetect.com" is read during the Windows XPboot process. It identifies what hardware devices are attached to the machine, and passes this information to the operating system loader. The file is located at the root of the system partition.
By default, Windows hides the extensions of files when viewed in Windows Explorer and on the Windows desktop. You may unhide all known file types by opening Windows Explorer, selecting Tools > Folder Options, clicking the View tab, and removing the checkmark to ñhide file extensions for known files types.î
The SRC attribute identifies what will appear in a frame.
file types are the ."something" part of a file. They serve to separate and recognize the content of files. (it's most used by windows since unix-like systems use the bash command line (#!path/to/program) with file with no extensions
Unsupported file types are file extensions that Windows does not know what to do with. This means that there is no program installed on the computer associated with a particular file type. To open an unsupported file type you must first install the program that the file uses to work with it.
Different file types have different file extensions. This is the three letters, after the dot in the file name. eg. *.exe is an executable file *.doc is a document file, used by windows Word. *.txt is a text file, opened by various word processors or notepad. Windows keeps a list of known file extensions and open the appropiate program when the file is clicked on. If windows does not know what to use to open it, it will have a generic icon and will prompt you for a program to open it, when you click on it. Be aware that Windows can hide the file extensions, so you won't be able to see it in file lists. You can change this. In explorer, click on 'tools' at the top of the window, then 'folder options', then 'view'. Down the list, you will see a tick box that hides known file extensions. Un-tick it, to see extensions in file lists. On the next tab 'File Types', you can see a list of all the know file extensions and the programs they are associated with.