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Other than Windows, Haiku doesn't rely on the 3-letter file extension for a file type (e.g. .txt, .jpg, .mp3). This method is only a last resort fallback. Haiku uses MIME types just like it's custom on the internet.

Setting the filetype of a specific file

You can change the type of a specific file, its icon and the associated application. Select the file and invoke the Add-Ons | Filetype add-on from the right-click context menu.

filetype-addon.png

The File Type

This is a JPEG file, it's MIME string image/jpeg. Let's say you definitely know that it's not a JPEG but a GIF. You can change that either by entering the correct MIME string by hand or with one of the two buttons below the textbox:

The Preferred Application

This drop-down menu shows a list of all applications that can handle this particular filetype. From here you can choose which program should open this specific file when it's double-clicked. You could, for example, change a HTML file's preferred application from the browser to a text editor while you're working on it. Every other HTML file still opens in the browser, only this particular one starts in your text editor.

The "Default Application" is the one that's set globally for that filetype. If you don't find the program you want to associate with this file in the drop-down menu, you'll again find the buttons Select... and Same As... which do the similar thing described under "The File Type" above.

The Icon

If you're wondering why the icon well on the top right is empty: Icons are normally inherited from the system default for that filetype. You can open the Filetype Add-On of a file that contains an icon and drag&drop it into your file's icon well. Or you double-click the icon well and create or edit your own icon in Icon-O-Matic.

Global settings with the Filetypes Preferences

The Filetypes preferences don't deal with individual files but with global settings of filetypes. You can change default icons and preferred applications or add, remove, or alter attributes of whole filetypes. You can even create your own filetype from scratch.

All filetypes and their configurations are stored in /boot/home/config/settings/beos_mime/. Before you start experimenting, it may be prudent to make a backup of that folder...

To learn more about the Filetypes preferences see the workshop: Filetypes, Attributes, Index and Queries.

Special settings for applications

If you invoke the Filetype Add-On on an executable (here: StyledEdit), you'll get a different dialog:

filetype-addon-stylededit.png

On top, you'll see, instead of a standardized MIME string, the unique application signature. With it, the system finds the program wherever it's installed.

Below it are several flags, controlling the app's behaviour:

Then there's the list of supported filetypes. You can add (and remove) filetypes if you think the application can handle them. As a consequence, the app will appear in the menu for preferred applications or Tracker's Open with... context menu when you right-click on a file of that type.

At the bottom are version and copyright information. Like the application signature, they are filled in by the app's author and shouldn't be altered.

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