;Amiga Hunk metadata :In
AmigaOS, a file with a
extension contains metadata for a companion
Amiga Hunk executable file. ;Extensible Metadata Platform :
Extensible Metadata Platform (XMP) metadata is stored in a sidecar file when either a
file format does not support embedded XMP metadata or if the workflow requires this. ;DxO sidecar :Similar to the XMP format, DOP sidecars store metadata and edits made through DxO PhotoLab and other DxO tools ;Connected Web Files and Folders :A
file system object that associated two or more files. The file system treats connected files as a unit for purposes of moving, copying, and deleting. Some versions of
Internet Explorer and
Microsoft Word can save an HTML and its hyperlinked assets as such a unit. ;THM :Many digital cameras will store a (thumbnail) file alongside a recorded movie, with the same base filename as the movie file. These thumbnail files are
JFIF-encoded image files. This system allows for quickly displaying a still preview of the movie, and storing camera data which is not supported by the AVI file format. ;INF :Acorn filesystems support metadata such as load and execution addresses that may not be natively supported on other filesystems. A file is used to store this metadata in text format, stored in a file with the same base filename, e.g. Menu and , and . ;JPEG + WAV :Some digital cameras allow for voice/audio annotations with photos. These are then stored as
WAV audio files alongside the
JPEG photo file, with the same base filename. ;PDF + annotations PDF viewers which allow the reader to annotate documents with comments and drawings may store these in a sidecar file, such as
Xournal's files. ;RunPacker :The MS-DOS-based
self-extracting archive generator
RunPacker relied heavily on sidecar files because the proprietary package format
PFA (
pack
file
archive) used in it did not natively store
file attributes or
timestamps. To address this limitation, a
backward-compatible system of
auxiliary files (as called in official documentation) was implemented to store aforementioned data in volumes without changing their format. These were added to the PFA volume the same way as ordinary files, except they were marked by special characters in their name, and software made aware of this system (sometimes called
ePFA,
Extended PFA) processed them
transparently. Older programs relying on the PFA format would simply read or extract the file along with all others found in the volume. The ePFA format was designed with further extensibility in mind, and has been actually extended with several features over time. ;Meta Information Encapsulation (MIE) :
Meta Information Encapsulation sidecar files. The MIE format is an extensible, dedicated meta information format part of
ExifTool. MIE files can be used to encapsulate meta information from many sources and bundle it together with any type of file. A variation of this are copies of the source file which contain largely the same information, but in a different format or from a previous version: ;Exif :Since many JPEG editing software used to destroy
Exif metadata stored in digital photos, some photo cataloging applications can extract the Exif data and store that in an file, so that the metadata can later be re-inserted into the JPEG file. ;Raw + JPEG :Many digital cameras allow to store both uncompressed
raw data and a
JFIF-encoded image file when shooting in raw mode. This allows for faster previewing the photo, and support by applications that do not support the (often undocumented) raw format. ;TIF + TFW or JPG + JGW :Aerial photos may be supplied with a
World File that determines the location, size and rotation of the image. ==Alternatives==