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A friend has sent me a file which, having moved to a Win7 PC from XP they cannot open. It may be a trivial file, I don't know.
It has a suffix of .dat but, when viewed as text, contains strings like Quill, Master Page, EschterStm, Micrisoft Publisher 3.0, MSPublisher.3, Quill96 Story Group Class.
So it may be Publisher, despite its file type.
I've tried Publisher 2010 and Publisher V2 but neither can open or view it. I've tried Word but with no success. Only text or hex viewers can show the contents, albeit not in correct form.
Any idea how I can view "in all its glory"?
Tony
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No, the file name is "Hall 1 RH Door undo bolts notice.dat" so, from the file name, would seem to be the sort of document that would be either a DTP or word processor document.
I bumped into the 'owner' this afternoon and he cannot for the life of him remember what it is.
Tony
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Register (or login) on our website and you will not see this ad.
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You could try TrID, but I don't know how effective it is.
There is also DROID.
Edited by micksharpe (Sat 14-Jul-12 18:19:03)
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Thanks. TrID returns
Generic OLE2 / Multistream Compound File
Used by various applications of the Microsoft Office suite, for example.
and Droid says
OLE2 Compound Document Format
Version
Other names
Identifiers PUID: fmt/111
Family
Classification Text (Structured)
Disclosure None
Description The OLE2 Compound Document Format is a generic document format
developed by Microsoft as the underlying native binary format for many of its Office
applications. The format is proprietary and Microsoft does not make details of its
structure public. The information here is derived primarily from OpenOffice.org's
reverse-engineered documentation of the format and should not therefore be
regarded as definitive. A Compound Document acts as a file system in which
independent data streams are organised within a hierarchy of containers, called
storages. All storages and streams are contained within a parent Root Storage.
A Directory Stream indexes every stream and storage in the file. A Compound
Document begins with the Compound Document Header, including pointers to the
location of the Directory Stream and Master Sector Allocation Table. The remainder
of the file is organised into Sectors, the positions of which are defined in the
Sector Allocation Table and Master Sector Allocation Table.
So it's clearly a MS Office file. I think I now know where I can try it on a version of MS Office 2003, which I believe refers to its Publisher files as V3. I can change the file type to try various Office apps and see what, if anything, succeeds.
[Edit for better layout]
Tony
Edited by cheshire_man (Sat 14-Jul-12 18:46:16)
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You may need to open it with the Binder app.
'Sir, please,' she said... 'Will you not share your wisdom with us?'
'I have no wisdom,' he told her.
'Your experiences, then?'
'They have been trivial, uninteresting, and full of error.'
Ian M. Banks - Feersum Endjinn
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It Ought to be Easy | Greasemonkey scripts
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I'll bear that in mind, though I very much doubt that the person concerned would have used MS Binder to combine various documents, he kept things very simple.
Tony
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Any idea how I can view "in all its glory"?
I wonder if it was an embedded OLE object, such as a Publisher document copied&pasted as an object into Word ??
Rename the file .doc or .docx and or .pub and see??
James be* pro (16.8 / 1.2 sync) - BQM - FTTC cab installed 18-jun-2012 - not yet active - est 44.6 / 6.5
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You may be able to find out more about the files contents with Compound File Explorer (but it's really a developer's tool).
'Sir, please,' she said... 'Will you not share your wisdom with us?'
'I have no wisdom,' he told her.
'Your experiences, then?'
'They have been trivial, uninteresting, and full of error.'
Ian M. Banks - Feersum Endjinn
.
It Ought to be Easy | Greasemonkey scripts
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I've renamed the file with .pub, .doc, and even .xls !
With it as .pub both Publisher 2003 and Publisher 2010 open it straight away, and show a completely blank document. As it's only a 14KB file I'm coming to the conclusion that it is a blank Publisher file that has has its file type changed. I've just opened a blank document in Publisher 2010 and saved it, and it's 79KB; downsaving it to Publisher 2000 or Publisher 98 results in a 64KB file.
I've gone back to the friend to ask if he can in any way recall the contents - if any...
Tony
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