What is the difference between .iff and .psd?
- Extension
- .iff
- .psd
- Format
- Binary
- Binary
- Category
- Raster Image
- Raster Image
- Developer
- Electronic Arts
- Adobe Systems
- Description
- The IFF (Interchange File Format) is a file format originally developed by Electronic Arts and Commodore-Amiga in the 1980s. It was designed to facilitate the sharing and storage of multimedia data, such as images, audio, and video, between different software applications and systems. The format is chunk-based, allowing it to encapsulate various types of data within a single file by organizing them into self-contained blocks. While it was most prominently used on Amiga computers, the IFF format has influenced the development of subsequent file formats, including the widely used AIFF (Audio Interchange File Format) for audio files.
- A PSD file is an image file created by Adobe Photoshop, a professional image-editing program often used to enhance digital photos and create web graphics. It is the native format used to save files in Photoshop. PSD files may include image layers, adjustment layers, layer masks, annotations, file information, keywords, and other Photoshop-specific elements. They are commonly created and shared among graphics professionals.
- MIME Type
- image/x-iff
- image/vnd.adobe.photoshop
- Sample
- sample.psd
- Wikipedia
- .iff on Wikipedia
- .psd on Wikipedia