WAV
From Just Solve the File Format Problem
				
								
				(Difference between revisions)
				
																
				
				
								
				|  (PRONOM update) |  (Added sample files) | ||
| Line 25: | Line 25: | ||
| == Metaformat files == | == Metaformat files == | ||
| * {{Synalysis|wav}} | * {{Synalysis|wav}} | ||
| + | |||
| + | == Sample files == | ||
| + | * https://telparia.com/fileFormatSamples/audio/wav/ | ||
| == External links == | == External links == | ||
Revision as of 17:21, 28 July 2020
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.
| Contents | 
Identification
Files begin with bytes 'R' 'I' 'F' 'F' ?? ?? ?? ?? 'W' 'A' 'V' 'E'.
See also
- Exif
- WAV (Applications) – List of applications known to use WAV
Specifications
- Format spec
- File format info
- Another file format info text file
- MSDN: Registered FOURCC Codes and WAVE Formats
- WAVE and AVI Codec Registries (Historic Registry)
Metaformat files
- Synalysis grammar file (for Hexinator / Synalize It!; more details)

