New Executable
From Just Solve the File Format Problem
(Difference between revisions)
(Category:Windows) |
|||
(One intermediate revision by one user not shown) | |||
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
'''New Executable''' ('''NE''') is an file format used by some versions of OS/2, MS-DOS and most commonly by 16-bit Microsoft Windows; it is used for executables, dynamically-linked libraries, drivers and as a container for [[Windows resource|resources]]. The NE format is an extension of [[MZ]]; it was succeeded by [[Portable Executable]] on Windows and [[Linear Executable]] on OS/2. | '''New Executable''' ('''NE''') is an file format used by some versions of OS/2, MS-DOS and most commonly by 16-bit Microsoft Windows; it is used for executables, dynamically-linked libraries, drivers and as a container for [[Windows resource|resources]]. The NE format is an extension of [[MZ]]; it was succeeded by [[Portable Executable]] on Windows and [[Linear Executable]] on OS/2. | ||
− | NE is used as a container format for [[FNT (Windows Font)|FNT]] fonts ( | + | NE is used as a container format for [[FNT (Windows Font)|FNT]] fonts (see [[FON]]), and for [[Icon library|icon libraries]]. |
== Identification == | == Identification == | ||
Line 31: | Line 31: | ||
[[Category:Microsoft]] | [[Category:Microsoft]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Windows]] | ||
[[Category:OS/2]] | [[Category:OS/2]] |
Latest revision as of 20:49, 29 March 2017
New Executable (NE) is an file format used by some versions of OS/2, MS-DOS and most commonly by 16-bit Microsoft Windows; it is used for executables, dynamically-linked libraries, drivers and as a container for resources. The NE format is an extension of MZ; it was succeeded by Portable Executable on Windows and Linear Executable on OS/2.
NE is used as a container format for FNT fonts (see FON), and for icon libraries.
Contents |
[edit] Identification
An NE file begins with the ASCII signature "MZ
". At offset 60 is a 4-byte integer pointing to an "extended" header that begins with "NE
". For more information, see MS-DOS EXE.
[edit] Sample files
- Lots of examples at cd.textfiles.com, such as