FILE extension changing while copying from Ubuntu to windows
Clash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP
I downloaded data in Ubuntu which has an extension .text/plain bit when I copied it to my Windows 10 through USB the file extension is changed to '.file'. What should I do now to open it?
windows files file-format file-type
|
show 2 more comments
I downloaded data in Ubuntu which has an extension .text/plain bit when I copied it to my Windows 10 through USB the file extension is changed to '.file'. What should I do now to open it?
windows files file-format file-type
2
Welcome to Ask Ubuntu. Ubuntu doesn't use extensions so it wouldn't be Ubuntu that is changing the name of the file. Whatever program you are using to copy/transfer the file to windows (most likely on the windows end) is changing the filename as a means of 'security' (as windows uses extension to control action; Ubuntu uses file contents). If youfile filename
(where filename is the name of your file) you can view the type of file according to Ubuntu or any *nix)
– guiverc
Jan 18 at 6:40
@guiverc Ubuntu certainly does use file extensions to the same extent Windows does. File extensions are standardised by IANA along with media types and shells such as Gnome and KDE use them for identifying icons and appropriate actions, which is exactly what Windows Explorer does.
– Ben
Jan 18 at 10:26
2
@Ben NO. Linux does not. Extensions are there to make it easier for humans to see what the file is. There is software for the desktop (!= Linux) that expect files to be named with an extension but Linux in itself does not care about that. And even then: the extensions are matched with a mime-type list.
– Rinzwind
Jan 18 at 11:12
1
@Rinzwind Ubuntu = linux distribution(s), and Ubuntu certainly does use extensions. Linux kernel also uses extensions for some limited purposes, e.g. loader locating so files. Overall Linux distributions use extensions for the same purposes as Windows, and used by the equivalent components, Windows Explorer being the equivalent of the Linux graphical shells like Gnome and KDE. It's possible to install Windows without the graphical shell, in which case most uses of file extensions will not occur.
– Ben
Jan 18 at 14:48
The desktop does but only to make things speed up a little bit. If those desktop coders would follow the correct method they too would scan for the 1st few bytes like linux does. And no: linux and ubuntu is not the same. Ubuntu is the desktop built on top of Linux.Those few tweaks made to the kernel don't matter
– Rinzwind
Jan 18 at 15:25
|
show 2 more comments
I downloaded data in Ubuntu which has an extension .text/plain bit when I copied it to my Windows 10 through USB the file extension is changed to '.file'. What should I do now to open it?
windows files file-format file-type
I downloaded data in Ubuntu which has an extension .text/plain bit when I copied it to my Windows 10 through USB the file extension is changed to '.file'. What should I do now to open it?
windows files file-format file-type
windows files file-format file-type
edited Jan 18 at 12:11
Arronical
13.2k84791
13.2k84791
asked Jan 18 at 6:32
ammuammu
314
314
2
Welcome to Ask Ubuntu. Ubuntu doesn't use extensions so it wouldn't be Ubuntu that is changing the name of the file. Whatever program you are using to copy/transfer the file to windows (most likely on the windows end) is changing the filename as a means of 'security' (as windows uses extension to control action; Ubuntu uses file contents). If youfile filename
(where filename is the name of your file) you can view the type of file according to Ubuntu or any *nix)
– guiverc
Jan 18 at 6:40
@guiverc Ubuntu certainly does use file extensions to the same extent Windows does. File extensions are standardised by IANA along with media types and shells such as Gnome and KDE use them for identifying icons and appropriate actions, which is exactly what Windows Explorer does.
– Ben
Jan 18 at 10:26
2
@Ben NO. Linux does not. Extensions are there to make it easier for humans to see what the file is. There is software for the desktop (!= Linux) that expect files to be named with an extension but Linux in itself does not care about that. And even then: the extensions are matched with a mime-type list.
– Rinzwind
Jan 18 at 11:12
1
@Rinzwind Ubuntu = linux distribution(s), and Ubuntu certainly does use extensions. Linux kernel also uses extensions for some limited purposes, e.g. loader locating so files. Overall Linux distributions use extensions for the same purposes as Windows, and used by the equivalent components, Windows Explorer being the equivalent of the Linux graphical shells like Gnome and KDE. It's possible to install Windows without the graphical shell, in which case most uses of file extensions will not occur.
– Ben
Jan 18 at 14:48
The desktop does but only to make things speed up a little bit. If those desktop coders would follow the correct method they too would scan for the 1st few bytes like linux does. And no: linux and ubuntu is not the same. Ubuntu is the desktop built on top of Linux.Those few tweaks made to the kernel don't matter
– Rinzwind
Jan 18 at 15:25
|
show 2 more comments
2
Welcome to Ask Ubuntu. Ubuntu doesn't use extensions so it wouldn't be Ubuntu that is changing the name of the file. Whatever program you are using to copy/transfer the file to windows (most likely on the windows end) is changing the filename as a means of 'security' (as windows uses extension to control action; Ubuntu uses file contents). If youfile filename
(where filename is the name of your file) you can view the type of file according to Ubuntu or any *nix)
– guiverc
Jan 18 at 6:40
@guiverc Ubuntu certainly does use file extensions to the same extent Windows does. File extensions are standardised by IANA along with media types and shells such as Gnome and KDE use them for identifying icons and appropriate actions, which is exactly what Windows Explorer does.
– Ben
Jan 18 at 10:26
2
@Ben NO. Linux does not. Extensions are there to make it easier for humans to see what the file is. There is software for the desktop (!= Linux) that expect files to be named with an extension but Linux in itself does not care about that. And even then: the extensions are matched with a mime-type list.
– Rinzwind
Jan 18 at 11:12
1
@Rinzwind Ubuntu = linux distribution(s), and Ubuntu certainly does use extensions. Linux kernel also uses extensions for some limited purposes, e.g. loader locating so files. Overall Linux distributions use extensions for the same purposes as Windows, and used by the equivalent components, Windows Explorer being the equivalent of the Linux graphical shells like Gnome and KDE. It's possible to install Windows without the graphical shell, in which case most uses of file extensions will not occur.
– Ben
Jan 18 at 14:48
The desktop does but only to make things speed up a little bit. If those desktop coders would follow the correct method they too would scan for the 1st few bytes like linux does. And no: linux and ubuntu is not the same. Ubuntu is the desktop built on top of Linux.Those few tweaks made to the kernel don't matter
– Rinzwind
Jan 18 at 15:25
2
2
Welcome to Ask Ubuntu. Ubuntu doesn't use extensions so it wouldn't be Ubuntu that is changing the name of the file. Whatever program you are using to copy/transfer the file to windows (most likely on the windows end) is changing the filename as a means of 'security' (as windows uses extension to control action; Ubuntu uses file contents). If you
file filename
(where filename is the name of your file) you can view the type of file according to Ubuntu or any *nix)– guiverc
Jan 18 at 6:40
Welcome to Ask Ubuntu. Ubuntu doesn't use extensions so it wouldn't be Ubuntu that is changing the name of the file. Whatever program you are using to copy/transfer the file to windows (most likely on the windows end) is changing the filename as a means of 'security' (as windows uses extension to control action; Ubuntu uses file contents). If you
file filename
(where filename is the name of your file) you can view the type of file according to Ubuntu or any *nix)– guiverc
Jan 18 at 6:40
@guiverc Ubuntu certainly does use file extensions to the same extent Windows does. File extensions are standardised by IANA along with media types and shells such as Gnome and KDE use them for identifying icons and appropriate actions, which is exactly what Windows Explorer does.
– Ben
Jan 18 at 10:26
@guiverc Ubuntu certainly does use file extensions to the same extent Windows does. File extensions are standardised by IANA along with media types and shells such as Gnome and KDE use them for identifying icons and appropriate actions, which is exactly what Windows Explorer does.
– Ben
Jan 18 at 10:26
2
2
@Ben NO. Linux does not. Extensions are there to make it easier for humans to see what the file is. There is software for the desktop (!= Linux) that expect files to be named with an extension but Linux in itself does not care about that. And even then: the extensions are matched with a mime-type list.
– Rinzwind
Jan 18 at 11:12
@Ben NO. Linux does not. Extensions are there to make it easier for humans to see what the file is. There is software for the desktop (!= Linux) that expect files to be named with an extension but Linux in itself does not care about that. And even then: the extensions are matched with a mime-type list.
– Rinzwind
Jan 18 at 11:12
1
1
@Rinzwind Ubuntu = linux distribution(s), and Ubuntu certainly does use extensions. Linux kernel also uses extensions for some limited purposes, e.g. loader locating so files. Overall Linux distributions use extensions for the same purposes as Windows, and used by the equivalent components, Windows Explorer being the equivalent of the Linux graphical shells like Gnome and KDE. It's possible to install Windows without the graphical shell, in which case most uses of file extensions will not occur.
– Ben
Jan 18 at 14:48
@Rinzwind Ubuntu = linux distribution(s), and Ubuntu certainly does use extensions. Linux kernel also uses extensions for some limited purposes, e.g. loader locating so files. Overall Linux distributions use extensions for the same purposes as Windows, and used by the equivalent components, Windows Explorer being the equivalent of the Linux graphical shells like Gnome and KDE. It's possible to install Windows without the graphical shell, in which case most uses of file extensions will not occur.
– Ben
Jan 18 at 14:48
The desktop does but only to make things speed up a little bit. If those desktop coders would follow the correct method they too would scan for the 1st few bytes like linux does. And no: linux and ubuntu is not the same. Ubuntu is the desktop built on top of Linux.Those few tweaks made to the kernel don't matter
– Rinzwind
Jan 18 at 15:25
The desktop does but only to make things speed up a little bit. If those desktop coders would follow the correct method they too would scan for the 1st few bytes like linux does. And no: linux and ubuntu is not the same. Ubuntu is the desktop built on top of Linux.Those few tweaks made to the kernel don't matter
– Rinzwind
Jan 18 at 15:25
|
show 2 more comments
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
It appears that Windows adds the .file
extension to any file with an extension it doesn't know/recognise. Understandable, because text/plain
is not a file extension but rather a 'content type'.
It seems that opening the file has worked on Ubuntu, because GNOME can "associate a media type with a file by examining both the filename suffix and the contents of the file" (Wikipedia).
To open the file in Windows, you can simply change the extension from .file
to .txt
, which is the most likely filetype. However, depending on where and for what purpose you downloaded the file, it could also be a .dat
(data) or other file. If you don't know how to change the file type, I'd advice to Google for it as that seems out of scope for this Ubuntu-oriented site :)
2
Nice one. Just a pointer you can always expand/modify your answer (by clicking 'edit' below it) instead of deleting it and posting a new one :) Similarly you can 'undelete' an answer you deleted.
– pomsky
Jan 18 at 8:00
3
More to the point, in Windows the character/
infilename.text/plain
is not a valid character for a filename. In Windows, filenames are not arbitrary sequences of bytes but a user-interface element with restrictions placed upon them to serve that purpose. Therefore control characters, and special shell metacharacters are not allowed. Whatever utility the poster used to copy the file has taken care of this issue.
– Ben
Jan 18 at 10:22
1
@Ben This restriction (no/
in filenames) also holds for Linux. AFAIR, there are only two forbidden characters in a Linux filename:/
and. This means the file the OP downloaded CANNOT have an extension of
.plain/text
.
– PerlDuck
Jan 18 at 12:20
add a comment |
Are you 100% sure that the file extension is .text/plain
???? I'm 99% sure that it's not possible. Maybe you are talking about file content?
Can you show us the output of runing file your_filewith_strange_extension
?
To open it on Windows, it should be enough renaming its extension to something you know. Do you know what type of file it is? if you downloaded a plain text file, you can rename it to your_filewith_strange_extension.txt
. The output of running (on linux) file your_filewith_strange_extension
should give you a hint about the file contents if you don't know what it is
The Readme.txt within the data says that it is .json file extention. im not able to open it, and when i opened it through .txt extension i cant able to load the data since it so 450Mb size.
– ammu
18 hours ago
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
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active
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active
oldest
votes
It appears that Windows adds the .file
extension to any file with an extension it doesn't know/recognise. Understandable, because text/plain
is not a file extension but rather a 'content type'.
It seems that opening the file has worked on Ubuntu, because GNOME can "associate a media type with a file by examining both the filename suffix and the contents of the file" (Wikipedia).
To open the file in Windows, you can simply change the extension from .file
to .txt
, which is the most likely filetype. However, depending on where and for what purpose you downloaded the file, it could also be a .dat
(data) or other file. If you don't know how to change the file type, I'd advice to Google for it as that seems out of scope for this Ubuntu-oriented site :)
2
Nice one. Just a pointer you can always expand/modify your answer (by clicking 'edit' below it) instead of deleting it and posting a new one :) Similarly you can 'undelete' an answer you deleted.
– pomsky
Jan 18 at 8:00
3
More to the point, in Windows the character/
infilename.text/plain
is not a valid character for a filename. In Windows, filenames are not arbitrary sequences of bytes but a user-interface element with restrictions placed upon them to serve that purpose. Therefore control characters, and special shell metacharacters are not allowed. Whatever utility the poster used to copy the file has taken care of this issue.
– Ben
Jan 18 at 10:22
1
@Ben This restriction (no/
in filenames) also holds for Linux. AFAIR, there are only two forbidden characters in a Linux filename:/
and. This means the file the OP downloaded CANNOT have an extension of
.plain/text
.
– PerlDuck
Jan 18 at 12:20
add a comment |
It appears that Windows adds the .file
extension to any file with an extension it doesn't know/recognise. Understandable, because text/plain
is not a file extension but rather a 'content type'.
It seems that opening the file has worked on Ubuntu, because GNOME can "associate a media type with a file by examining both the filename suffix and the contents of the file" (Wikipedia).
To open the file in Windows, you can simply change the extension from .file
to .txt
, which is the most likely filetype. However, depending on where and for what purpose you downloaded the file, it could also be a .dat
(data) or other file. If you don't know how to change the file type, I'd advice to Google for it as that seems out of scope for this Ubuntu-oriented site :)
2
Nice one. Just a pointer you can always expand/modify your answer (by clicking 'edit' below it) instead of deleting it and posting a new one :) Similarly you can 'undelete' an answer you deleted.
– pomsky
Jan 18 at 8:00
3
More to the point, in Windows the character/
infilename.text/plain
is not a valid character for a filename. In Windows, filenames are not arbitrary sequences of bytes but a user-interface element with restrictions placed upon them to serve that purpose. Therefore control characters, and special shell metacharacters are not allowed. Whatever utility the poster used to copy the file has taken care of this issue.
– Ben
Jan 18 at 10:22
1
@Ben This restriction (no/
in filenames) also holds for Linux. AFAIR, there are only two forbidden characters in a Linux filename:/
and. This means the file the OP downloaded CANNOT have an extension of
.plain/text
.
– PerlDuck
Jan 18 at 12:20
add a comment |
It appears that Windows adds the .file
extension to any file with an extension it doesn't know/recognise. Understandable, because text/plain
is not a file extension but rather a 'content type'.
It seems that opening the file has worked on Ubuntu, because GNOME can "associate a media type with a file by examining both the filename suffix and the contents of the file" (Wikipedia).
To open the file in Windows, you can simply change the extension from .file
to .txt
, which is the most likely filetype. However, depending on where and for what purpose you downloaded the file, it could also be a .dat
(data) or other file. If you don't know how to change the file type, I'd advice to Google for it as that seems out of scope for this Ubuntu-oriented site :)
It appears that Windows adds the .file
extension to any file with an extension it doesn't know/recognise. Understandable, because text/plain
is not a file extension but rather a 'content type'.
It seems that opening the file has worked on Ubuntu, because GNOME can "associate a media type with a file by examining both the filename suffix and the contents of the file" (Wikipedia).
To open the file in Windows, you can simply change the extension from .file
to .txt
, which is the most likely filetype. However, depending on where and for what purpose you downloaded the file, it could also be a .dat
(data) or other file. If you don't know how to change the file type, I'd advice to Google for it as that seems out of scope for this Ubuntu-oriented site :)
answered Jan 18 at 7:03
KoenKoen
387425
387425
2
Nice one. Just a pointer you can always expand/modify your answer (by clicking 'edit' below it) instead of deleting it and posting a new one :) Similarly you can 'undelete' an answer you deleted.
– pomsky
Jan 18 at 8:00
3
More to the point, in Windows the character/
infilename.text/plain
is not a valid character for a filename. In Windows, filenames are not arbitrary sequences of bytes but a user-interface element with restrictions placed upon them to serve that purpose. Therefore control characters, and special shell metacharacters are not allowed. Whatever utility the poster used to copy the file has taken care of this issue.
– Ben
Jan 18 at 10:22
1
@Ben This restriction (no/
in filenames) also holds for Linux. AFAIR, there are only two forbidden characters in a Linux filename:/
and. This means the file the OP downloaded CANNOT have an extension of
.plain/text
.
– PerlDuck
Jan 18 at 12:20
add a comment |
2
Nice one. Just a pointer you can always expand/modify your answer (by clicking 'edit' below it) instead of deleting it and posting a new one :) Similarly you can 'undelete' an answer you deleted.
– pomsky
Jan 18 at 8:00
3
More to the point, in Windows the character/
infilename.text/plain
is not a valid character for a filename. In Windows, filenames are not arbitrary sequences of bytes but a user-interface element with restrictions placed upon them to serve that purpose. Therefore control characters, and special shell metacharacters are not allowed. Whatever utility the poster used to copy the file has taken care of this issue.
– Ben
Jan 18 at 10:22
1
@Ben This restriction (no/
in filenames) also holds for Linux. AFAIR, there are only two forbidden characters in a Linux filename:/
and. This means the file the OP downloaded CANNOT have an extension of
.plain/text
.
– PerlDuck
Jan 18 at 12:20
2
2
Nice one. Just a pointer you can always expand/modify your answer (by clicking 'edit' below it) instead of deleting it and posting a new one :) Similarly you can 'undelete' an answer you deleted.
– pomsky
Jan 18 at 8:00
Nice one. Just a pointer you can always expand/modify your answer (by clicking 'edit' below it) instead of deleting it and posting a new one :) Similarly you can 'undelete' an answer you deleted.
– pomsky
Jan 18 at 8:00
3
3
More to the point, in Windows the character
/
in filename.text/plain
is not a valid character for a filename. In Windows, filenames are not arbitrary sequences of bytes but a user-interface element with restrictions placed upon them to serve that purpose. Therefore control characters, and special shell metacharacters are not allowed. Whatever utility the poster used to copy the file has taken care of this issue.– Ben
Jan 18 at 10:22
More to the point, in Windows the character
/
in filename.text/plain
is not a valid character for a filename. In Windows, filenames are not arbitrary sequences of bytes but a user-interface element with restrictions placed upon them to serve that purpose. Therefore control characters, and special shell metacharacters are not allowed. Whatever utility the poster used to copy the file has taken care of this issue.– Ben
Jan 18 at 10:22
1
1
@Ben This restriction (no
/
in filenames) also holds for Linux. AFAIR, there are only two forbidden characters in a Linux filename: /
and
. This means the file the OP downloaded CANNOT have an extension of .plain/text
.– PerlDuck
Jan 18 at 12:20
@Ben This restriction (no
/
in filenames) also holds for Linux. AFAIR, there are only two forbidden characters in a Linux filename: /
and
. This means the file the OP downloaded CANNOT have an extension of .plain/text
.– PerlDuck
Jan 18 at 12:20
add a comment |
Are you 100% sure that the file extension is .text/plain
???? I'm 99% sure that it's not possible. Maybe you are talking about file content?
Can you show us the output of runing file your_filewith_strange_extension
?
To open it on Windows, it should be enough renaming its extension to something you know. Do you know what type of file it is? if you downloaded a plain text file, you can rename it to your_filewith_strange_extension.txt
. The output of running (on linux) file your_filewith_strange_extension
should give you a hint about the file contents if you don't know what it is
The Readme.txt within the data says that it is .json file extention. im not able to open it, and when i opened it through .txt extension i cant able to load the data since it so 450Mb size.
– ammu
18 hours ago
add a comment |
Are you 100% sure that the file extension is .text/plain
???? I'm 99% sure that it's not possible. Maybe you are talking about file content?
Can you show us the output of runing file your_filewith_strange_extension
?
To open it on Windows, it should be enough renaming its extension to something you know. Do you know what type of file it is? if you downloaded a plain text file, you can rename it to your_filewith_strange_extension.txt
. The output of running (on linux) file your_filewith_strange_extension
should give you a hint about the file contents if you don't know what it is
The Readme.txt within the data says that it is .json file extention. im not able to open it, and when i opened it through .txt extension i cant able to load the data since it so 450Mb size.
– ammu
18 hours ago
add a comment |
Are you 100% sure that the file extension is .text/plain
???? I'm 99% sure that it's not possible. Maybe you are talking about file content?
Can you show us the output of runing file your_filewith_strange_extension
?
To open it on Windows, it should be enough renaming its extension to something you know. Do you know what type of file it is? if you downloaded a plain text file, you can rename it to your_filewith_strange_extension.txt
. The output of running (on linux) file your_filewith_strange_extension
should give you a hint about the file contents if you don't know what it is
Are you 100% sure that the file extension is .text/plain
???? I'm 99% sure that it's not possible. Maybe you are talking about file content?
Can you show us the output of runing file your_filewith_strange_extension
?
To open it on Windows, it should be enough renaming its extension to something you know. Do you know what type of file it is? if you downloaded a plain text file, you can rename it to your_filewith_strange_extension.txt
. The output of running (on linux) file your_filewith_strange_extension
should give you a hint about the file contents if you don't know what it is
answered Feb 1 at 14:14
Pablo KPablo K
174
174
The Readme.txt within the data says that it is .json file extention. im not able to open it, and when i opened it through .txt extension i cant able to load the data since it so 450Mb size.
– ammu
18 hours ago
add a comment |
The Readme.txt within the data says that it is .json file extention. im not able to open it, and when i opened it through .txt extension i cant able to load the data since it so 450Mb size.
– ammu
18 hours ago
The Readme.txt within the data says that it is .json file extention. im not able to open it, and when i opened it through .txt extension i cant able to load the data since it so 450Mb size.
– ammu
18 hours ago
The Readme.txt within the data says that it is .json file extention. im not able to open it, and when i opened it through .txt extension i cant able to load the data since it so 450Mb size.
– ammu
18 hours ago
add a comment |
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2
Welcome to Ask Ubuntu. Ubuntu doesn't use extensions so it wouldn't be Ubuntu that is changing the name of the file. Whatever program you are using to copy/transfer the file to windows (most likely on the windows end) is changing the filename as a means of 'security' (as windows uses extension to control action; Ubuntu uses file contents). If you
file filename
(where filename is the name of your file) you can view the type of file according to Ubuntu or any *nix)– guiverc
Jan 18 at 6:40
@guiverc Ubuntu certainly does use file extensions to the same extent Windows does. File extensions are standardised by IANA along with media types and shells such as Gnome and KDE use them for identifying icons and appropriate actions, which is exactly what Windows Explorer does.
– Ben
Jan 18 at 10:26
2
@Ben NO. Linux does not. Extensions are there to make it easier for humans to see what the file is. There is software for the desktop (!= Linux) that expect files to be named with an extension but Linux in itself does not care about that. And even then: the extensions are matched with a mime-type list.
– Rinzwind
Jan 18 at 11:12
1
@Rinzwind Ubuntu = linux distribution(s), and Ubuntu certainly does use extensions. Linux kernel also uses extensions for some limited purposes, e.g. loader locating so files. Overall Linux distributions use extensions for the same purposes as Windows, and used by the equivalent components, Windows Explorer being the equivalent of the Linux graphical shells like Gnome and KDE. It's possible to install Windows without the graphical shell, in which case most uses of file extensions will not occur.
– Ben
Jan 18 at 14:48
The desktop does but only to make things speed up a little bit. If those desktop coders would follow the correct method they too would scan for the 1st few bytes like linux does. And no: linux and ubuntu is not the same. Ubuntu is the desktop built on top of Linux.Those few tweaks made to the kernel don't matter
– Rinzwind
Jan 18 at 15:25