Skip to main content

Blog entry by Gwendolyn O'Flynn

ALE File Format Explained — Open With FileViewPro

ALE File Format Explained — Open With FileViewPro

An ALE file generally denotes an Avid Log Exchange file 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 matched later using its identifiers.

The quickest way to check whether your .ALE is the Avid type is to open it in a text editor like Notepad; if you see clearly visible text arranged in a table-like layout with sections such as "Heading," "Column," and "Data," plus tab-separated rows, it’s almost certainly an Avid Log Exchange file, whereas garbled symbols or formats like XML/JSON suggest a different program created it, making context and file location important, and file size helps too since Avid ALEs are usually small while very large files rarely match this log format.

If you only need to read the data, opening the ALE in Excel or Google Sheets using tab-delimited settings will present the columns clearly, though you must watch for spreadsheets changing timecodes or leading zeros, and in Avid the proper workflow is to import the ALE so it makes a bin of clips with metadata that you then link or relink via reel/tape names and timecode, with the most common issues coming from inconsistent reel naming or timecode/frame-rate mismatches.

In most workflows, an ALE refers to an Avid Log Exchange file, serving as a tab-delimited clip sheet that works like a text-mode spreadsheet tailored for editing systems, holding clip names, scene/take data, camera and sound roll tags, notes, and vital reel/tape and timecode in/out info, and its plain-text nature allows logging apps, dailies processes, or assistants to create it and deliver it so editors can import organized metadata efficiently.

1705823675602.pngIf you have any thoughts concerning exactly where and how to use best ALE file viewer, you can call us at our web-site. The real value of an ALE comes from how it links raw media to an organized edit, since bringing it into Avid Media Composer creates bin clips already filled with proper labels, eliminating manual entry, and the reel/tape names with timecode then act like a match reference that helps the system relink to the right source files, meaning an ALE provides context—telling the software what the footage is and how to match it—rather than actual content.

Even though "ALE" usually means Avid Log Exchange, the extension isn’t exclusive, so the simplest way to confirm what yours is remains to open it in a text editor and see whether it appears as a tabular log with headings and columns about clips, reels, and timecode; if so, it’s almost certainly the Avid-style metadata log, but if it doesn’t look like that, it may belong to another program and must be identified by its origin.

  • Share

Reviews


  
×