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・ FileMaker
・ Filemaker Center
・ FileMaker Dynamic Markup Language
・ FileMaker Inc.
・ FileMan
・ Filemobile
・ Filemon Bartolome Vela
・ Filemon F. Indire
・ Filemon Lagman
・ Filemon Vela, Jr.
・ Filemon Vela, Sr.
・ Filemón Arcos
・ Filemón Navarro
・ Filemón Treviño
・ Filenadol
Filename
・ Filename extension
・ Filename mangling
・ Filene Research Institute
・ Filene's
・ Filene's Basement
・ Filene's Department Store
・ FileNet
・ Filep Karma
・ FilePro
・ Filer
・ Filer (surname)
・ Filer and Stowell
・ Filer Charter Township, Michigan
・ Filer Haven


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Filename : ウィキペディア英語版
Filename

A filename (also written as two words, file name) is a name used to uniquely identify a computer file stored in a file system. Different file systems impose different restrictions on filename lengths and the allowed characters within filenames.
A filename may include one or more of these components:
* host (or node or server) – network device that contains the file
* device (or drive) – hardware device or drive
* directory (or path) – directory tree (e.g., /usr/bin, \TEMP, (), etc.)
* file – base name of the file
* type (format or extension) – indicates the content type of the file (e.g. .txt, .exe, .COM, etc.)
* version – revision or generation number of the file
The components required to identify a file varies across operating systems, as does the syntax and format for a valid filename.
Discussions of filenames are complicated by a lack of standardisation of the term. Sometimes "filename" is used to mean the entire name, such as the Windows name ''c:\directory\myfile.txt''. Sometimes, it will be used to refer to the components, so the filename in this case would be ''myfile.txt''. Sometimes, it is a reference that excludes an extension, so the filename would be just ''myfile''. Such ambiguity is widespread and this article does not attempt to define any one meaning, and indeed may be using any of these meanings. Some systems will adopt their own standardised nomenclature like "path name" but these too are not standardised across systems.
==History==

Around 1962, the Compatible Time-Sharing System introduced the concept of a ''file'' (i.e. non-paper file).
Around this same time appeared the dot (period or full-stop) as a filename extension separator, and the limit to three letter extensions might have come from RAD50 16-bit limits.
Traditionally, filenames allowed only alphanumeric characters, but as time progressed, the number of characters allowed increased. This led to compatibility problems when moving files from one file system to another.
Around 1995, VFAT, an extension to the FAT filesystem, was introduced in Windows 95 and Windows NT 3.5. It allowed mixed-case Unicode long filenames (LFNs), in addition to classic "8.3" names.
In 1985, RFC 959 officially defined a ''pathname'' to be the character string which must be entered into a file system by a user in order to identify a file.〔RFC 959
(IETF.org ) RFC 959, File Transfer Protocol (FTP)


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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