TrID is a tiny console-based tool for identifying more than 7,000 file formats from their content alone.
The program could be handy if you've found a file that's lost its original extension, or maybe it has an extension you don't recognise and you'd like to know what it is, or where it's come from.
Please note: TrID relies on a set of file definitions which aren't included in the download. To make it work, you must download the archive file from here and unpack it to the TrID folder (triddefs.trd and trid.exe must be in the same folder).
Once that's done, run the program by pointing it at any file, like this:
trid file
TrID then displays as many matching formats as it recognises, with the percentage probability of them being accurate. Here's what we got for a Word DOCX document:
TrID/32 - File Identifier v2.24 - (C) 2003-16 By M.Pontello
Definitions found: 7681
Analyzing...
Collecting data from file: file
85.4% (.DOCX) Word Microsoft Office Open XML Format document (23500/1/4)
14.5% (.ZIP) ZIP compressed archive (4000/1)
DOCX files host Word documents in a ZIP container, and TrID had correctly identified them both.
Verdict:
TrID provides a surprisingly accurate and configurable way to identify file types. It's mildly annoying that you have to download and unpack the file definitions manually, but that only takes a moment and once it's done the program works without issue.
Your Comments & Opinion
Protect files and folders from changes
Identify file formats from their content
Identify the real formats of your files
Browse the low-level details of a host of file types with this low-level tool
Locate files by name, size, date, time and more with this portable search tool
Keep an eye on the health of all of your hard drives with this free tool
A useful hard drive benchmark
An advanced free tool for renaming large numbers of files in a flash
Preserve your desktop icon layout with this handy backup tool
Preserve your desktop icon layout with this handy backup tool