“How to join .001 files” or "How to join avi.001 or mp3,rmvb,mpeg.001"– this is the question that most online users who download stuffs are asking. With sites like mediafire, megaupload, netload, deposit files, etc. limiting file size for upload and download, people are dividing large files into smaller parts. Suppose you have a file which is of 900 mb, and you want it to upload on meadiafire.com. But, the problem is if you don’t have a premium account, you cannot upload more than 100mb sized files on mediafire.com. So, the question arises what to do. You simply download a file splitter or joiner, I personally prefer hjsplit. You can download it from here
Most of the files that you see of the form .001, .002 are split using hjsplit. To join them you just need to use hjsplit. You do not have to install HJSplit. Just extract 'hjsplit.zip' which you would download and double click on HJSplit.exe to start HJSplit. After thar, the main window of HJSplit will appear. To join the files, click on 'Join':
HJSplit is a popular freeware program to split and recombine files. The program is available on Windows, Linux and a variety of other platforms.
Why should one want to split and recombine files? For instance, think of a file of 50 Mb, and try to send it to a friend, post it in a newsgroup or upload it to a Website or FTP server. It is usually easier to send/receive, upload/download smaller parts than handle the entire file in one go.
HJSplit can also be useful for backups. A file of e.g. 10 gigabytes in size can be split into smaller parts which then can be burned to CD's, DVDs, copied to USB sticks or uploaded to an online backup service.
HJSplit for Windows and Linux support file sizes of over 100 Gigabytes, MD5 checksums, file-compare, "run without install" and both editions are fully portable.
All HJSplit editions are compatible with each other and allow you to exchange files between different operating systems. E.g. a file split on Linux can be joined on Windows 7 and vice versa.
Click on 'Start':
Most of the files that you see of the form .001, .002 are split using hjsplit. To join them you just need to use hjsplit. You do not have to install HJSplit. Just extract 'hjsplit.zip' which you would download and double click on HJSplit.exe to start HJSplit. After thar, the main window of HJSplit will appear. To join the files, click on 'Join':
HJSplit is a popular freeware program to split and recombine files. The program is available on Windows, Linux and a variety of other platforms.
Why should one want to split and recombine files? For instance, think of a file of 50 Mb, and try to send it to a friend, post it in a newsgroup or upload it to a Website or FTP server. It is usually easier to send/receive, upload/download smaller parts than handle the entire file in one go.
HJSplit can also be useful for backups. A file of e.g. 10 gigabytes in size can be split into smaller parts which then can be burned to CD's, DVDs, copied to USB sticks or uploaded to an online backup service.
HJSplit for Windows and Linux support file sizes of over 100 Gigabytes, MD5 checksums, file-compare, "run without install" and both editions are fully portable.
Screenshot of HJSplit for Windows
Windows Linux MAC BSD | Java PHP Amiga | Windows 3.x DOS OS/2 |
All HJSplit editions are compatible with each other and allow you to exchange files between different operating systems. E.g. a file split on Linux can be joined on Windows 7 and vice versa.
In the new window that appears, click on input file:
In the new window, select only the first file of the files that we would like to join (it automatically shows only .001 file), so fired.avi.001 in this case, and click on 'Open' after that.
Click on 'Start':
The files have been successfully joined! The joined output file is stored in the default location, which would be same as the location of your input .001 file. Enjoy :)
"How to split files into .001, .002, etc." - To split files of large size using hjsplit into smaller files, you have to employ the same process - just use split instead of join and specify the size of splitted files, preferably keep it to 100mb.
0 comments:
Post a Comment