WAV

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* [http://www.textfiles.com/programming/FORMATS/wavformat.pro Another file format info text file]
 
* [http://www.textfiles.com/programming/FORMATS/wavformat.pro Another file format info text file]
 
* [http://imgur.com/a/PbN8H#0 WAV101 an audio file walkthrough]
 
* [http://imgur.com/a/PbN8H#0 WAV101 an audio file walkthrough]
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* [http://wiki.dpconline.org/images/4/46/WAV_Assessment_v1.0.pdf Format preservation assessment]
  
 
[[Category:RIFF based file formats]]
 
[[Category:RIFF based file formats]]

Revision as of 13:31, 12 January 2016

File Format
Name WAV
Ontology
Extension(s) .wav
.wave
MIME Type(s) audio/x-wav
audio/vnd.wave
audio/wav
audio/wave
audio/x-pn-wav
LoCFDD fdd000001
fdd000002
fdd000356
fdd000357
PRONOM fmt/6, fmt/142
Released 1991

The Waveform Audio File Format (WAV or WAVE) is a widely used audio format, originally developed by Microsoft and IBM and based on the RIFF wrapper format. The usual audio encoding in a .wav file is LPCM, considered an 'uncompressed' encoding. Because of large file sizes, WAV is not well-suited for distributing audio such as songs or podcasts. WAV is used in MS-Windows to store sounds used in applications. It is also used as an archival format for first-generation (master) files, often with a metadata chunk as specified in the Broadcast Wave (BWF) standard.

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