Are AXM Files Safe? Use FileViewPro To Check
An AXM file can be either text-based or binary, so the quickest way to identify it is by opening it in a text editor to see if it’s XML or binary; XML full of Esri markers—ARCXML, ArcIMS, LAYER, FEATURE, SHAPEFILE, SDE, RASTER—almost certainly indicates an ArcIMS/ArcXML configuration pointing to external … Read more
How To Easily Open AXM Files With FileViewPro
An AXM file is identified by its content and context, so step one is opening it in Notepad, Notepad++, or VS Code to determine whether it’s XML or binary; XML populated with Esri keywords—ARCXML, ArcIMS, FEATURE, LAYER, RASTER, SHAPEFILE, SDE—strongly indicates an ArcIMS/ArcXML map configuration pointing outward to GIS datasets … Read more
Are AXM Files Safe? Use FileViewPro To Check
An AXM file isn’t a one-format extension, so discovering what yours is comes from inspecting its contents: readable XML in a text editor—especially with terms like ARCXML, ArcIMS, FEATURE, LAYER, RASTER, or SHAPEFILE—points to an ArcIMS/ArcXML map configuration describing layers and linking to GIS sources denoted by file paths or … Read more