You should consider the extension for, at least, three situations:
- Anti virus can check files differently depending on the extension
- Backup programs can also react on this
- Windows takes it into account when indexing files
Compass Ing. y Sistemas Dr. Ramon Ribo
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Daniel Önnerby escribió:
Well... From the lack of responses I gather that you actually don't give
a damn what file extension I use :)
I think this is fare enough and maybe a SQLite database shouldn't be
tied to a single file extension.
Anyway.. Thanks for listening and thanks for the best database ever!
Daniel Önnerby wrote:
Hi all!
I have developed a small windows application that use a SQLite
database as it's main format.
The file is NOT a kind of document, it's more of a settings-file
stored in the users "Application data"-directory and the extension
will not be associated with the application.
I know I can use any kind of extension on this file, but what
file-extension is the most common for SQLite-files, .db, .db3, .SQLite?
What file-extensions do the SQLite management tools associate?
What do you recommend?
Best regards!
Daniel
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