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File Parts like .001, .002, and etc


CebuXtrEm

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Since others are mentioning lots of different ones... I recommend File Splitter and Joiner. It's similar to HJSplit except that it's faster and can join more types of files. It's what I started using after I realised that HJSplit couldn't join all the types of files I wanted. It's free as well.

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7zip is free and a lot more stable than winrar from what I notice. So that probably that's a good option.

That was my thoughts too, however when I was going to unrar Origins: Spirits of the Past with 7zip on my server it kept giving me errors, finally I used a different program and it worked the first time. Though on the Windows build 7zip is a great program.

use winrar or hjsplit or any other archiving program & winrar is not free so if u dont want to pay use izarc or 7zip but izarc is better

What makes izarc better? And WinRAR has an unlimited trial, so its "free". The main reason I use WinRAR is in case the RAR gets corrupted there is a small repair archive that might let you repair the RAR, its not granulated that it'll work, but its worth a try. And IDK if 7zip or izarc support that.

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It depends on what type of archive it is. I've seen 7-zip split archives as 'Archive.7z.001, Archive.7z.002, ...' and they were not meant to be joined by HJSplit, rather just unpacked with 7-zip. If it's a rar file with .001, .002 extensions, they need to be joined first.

Personally, I use 7-zip for all archive formats since it's truly free, not an evaluation version with nag screens at startup.

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  • 2 months later...

try HJSplit is a popular freeware program to split and recombine files. The program is available on Windows, Linux and a variety of other platforms.

Why should one want to split and recombine files? For instance, think of a file of 50 Mb, and try to send it to a friend, post it in a newsgroup or upload it to a Website or FTP server. It is usually easier to send/receive, upload/download smaller parts than handle the entire file in one go.

HJSplit can also be useful for backups. A file of e.g. 10 gigabytes in size can be split into smaller parts which then can be burned to CD's, DVDs, copied to USB sticks or uploaded to an online backup service.

HJSplit for Windows and Linux support file sizes of over 100 Gigabytes, MD5 checksums, file-compare, "run without install" and both editions are fully portable.

hjsplit_3.0_440.jpg


/>http://www.freebytesoftware.com/download/hjsplit.zip
/>http://www.freebyte.net/download/hjsplit.zip
/>http://www.treepad.net/download/hjsplit.zip

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