After takin a swig o' Arrakan spice grog, michaelmschmidt@xxxxxxx ("Michael Schmidt") belched out: > I am writing a client GUI application and am adding backup/restore > features. I noticed that different backup file extensions are used > for PostgreSQL - pgAdmin uses .backup (possible problem because it > is not consistent with 8.3 file names) and PG Lightning Admin uses > .bak (possible problem because it is generic). To reduce the chance > of the user making an error, I was wondering if it would make sense > to standardize PostgreSQL backup file extension names - something > like .pgb (PostgreSQL Backup). I Googled pgb and it doesn't look > like anything uses this extension. Well, Unix doesn't have any notion of "extensions." That's something for legacy operating systems, like MVS, CP/M, MS/DOS, and such. On modern OSes, they generally simply support having long names, and you are free to use whatever prefix/suffix combinations you prefer. -- let name="cbbrowne" and tld="gmail.com" in name ^ "@" ^ tld;; http://linuxdatabases.info/info/rdbms.html Rules of the Evil Overlord #128. "I will not employ robots as agents of destruction if there is any possible way that they can be re-programmed or if their battery packs are externally mounted and easily removable." <http://www.eviloverlord.com/>