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Blog entry by Una Atkin

FileViewPro Review: ALE File Compatibility Tested

FileViewPro Review: ALE File Compatibility Tested

An ALE file is usually an Avid-formatted metadata log that acts as a tab-delimited, plain-text metadata handoff in film/TV workflows, not storing actual audio or video but instead listing clip names, scenes/takes, rolls, notes, and the key data—reel/tape names and timecode in/out—so footage arrives in the edit neatly labeled and can be reliably relinked later using its identifiers.

A simple way to identify an Avid-style .ALE is to open it in Notepad and look for legible table-like text organized into labeled sections like "Heading," "Column," and "Data," followed by tab-separated entries; if instead you see mostly unreadable content or structured formats like XML/JSON, it’s likely from another program, so the source folder matters, and because Avid ALEs are tiny metadata logs, unusually large files usually aren’t Avid logs.

If you simply want to inspect the file, importing it into Excel or Google Sheets as tab-delimited will display the metadata in columns you can filter or sort, but these apps can rewrite timecode values unintentionally, and for Avid workflows the usual process is to import the ALE to build a metadata-filled bin and then link/relink the clips using reel/tape names and timecode, noting that relink failures often stem from reel-name mismatches or timecode/frame-rate discrepancies.

wlmp-file-FileViewPro.jpgIf you cherished this article therefore you would like to obtain more info relating to ALE file program nicely visit the web-site. An ALE file in its most common use is an Avid Log Exchange file—a lightweight metadata container used in pro video and film workflows to move clip information between stages, functioning like a textified spreadsheet meant for editing systems rather than storing media, holding details such as clip names, scene/take numbers, camera and audio roll IDs, notes, and especially reel/tape names with timecode in/out, and because it’s plain tab-delimited text, it can be generated by logging tools, dailies pipelines, or assistants and then imported so editors receive organized metadata instantly.

What makes an ALE especially powerful is that it bridges unorganized media with a structured editing project; when loaded into Avid Media Composer, it generates clips carrying correct names so editors avoid tedious labeling, and the same metadata—chiefly reel/tape plus timecode—serves as a reliable identifier for relinking, so the ALE itself is context, telling the system what each shot is and where the original lives.

Despite "ALE" most often meaning an Avid Log Exchange file, the extension isn’t exclusive, so the straightforward way to identify yours is to view it in a text editor and check for a tab-separated table with clip, reel, and timecode fields; if present, it’s almost certainly Avid-style, but if absent, then another application likely produced it and you must rely on its source to determine what it is.

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