Forum Discussion
Announcing New File Viewers Available for OneDrive For Business
Our vision here on the OneDrive for Business and SharePoint team has always been to give you the best experience for all your files. While you’ve always been able to store basically any file with us, we have been investing heavily in our web viewing technology and now view over 250 different file formats (see below for the full list) in OneDrive and SharePoint!
In the past, if you had native Adobe formats like Photoshop and Illustrator, 3D files, DICOM images, or even some of our own formats like Visio, you would have to resort to a separate viewer (or worse, pay for a third-party solution to manage these files when your organization may already be getting OneDrive with Office 365). Today, we are excited to announce support for these formats, and more.
Last year at Microsoft Ignite, we added support for major Adobe file formats, including Photoshop (PSD) and Illustrator (AI), in addition to our long-standing support for the Acrobat format (PDF). Also last year, we improved our video player to make your experience significantly faster by streaming high-quality videos without requiring them to fully download before playback.
Today, we build on that to add support for 3D formats (3MF, FBX, OBJ, PLY, STL), and this lines up very nicely with what we have previewed in the Windows 10 Creators Update, which is coming soon (more information available here: https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/upcoming-features). Of course, we are completely cross-platform, so Mac and Linux users get seamless 3D support in OneDrive and SharePoint, all without requiring any browser plug-ins.
If you’re in the healthcare field, we’ve also added support for DICOM images, with much more coming later in the year – letting you view x-rays, MRIs, CT scans, and more through OneDrive and SharePoint, which is fully HIPAA compliant by the way (https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/TrustCenter/Compliance/HIPAA).
And saving perhaps the best for last, we’ve integrated Visio (VSD, VSDX) viewing as well, making it much easier to share your ideas with the world using OneDrive and Visio together.
When you consider all of this, plus the plethora of other files we support viewing, including Office files (where we support editing and coauthoring across web, desktop, and mobile) to even viewing and editing source code, we hope it’s clear that OneDrive is the place for all your files! We aren’t done of course, and we will keep bringing even more file formats to our viewers in the future and will keep you updated as we do. Finally, we’re eager to hear from you on what formats we should tackle next – either in the comments below, or on our UserVoice site, here - https://onedrive.uservoice.com.
Thanks
Nicolas Cabeen - OneDrive/SharePoint Program Manager
PS – here’s the full list of file types that we now support viewing online in OneDrive for Business and SharePoint.
Documents:
csv, doc, docm, docx, dotx, eml, msg, odp, ods, odt, pdf, pot, potm, potx, pps, ppsx, ppt, pptm, pptx, rtf, vsd, vsdx, xls, xlsb, xlsm, xlsx
Images:
ai, arw, bmp, cr2, eps, erf, gif, ico, icon, jpeg, jpg, mrw, nef, orf, pict, png, psd, tif, tiff
Video:
3gp, m4v, mov, mp4, wmv
3D:
3mf, fbx, obj, ply, stl
Medical:
dcm, dcm30, dic, dicm, dicom
Text and code:
abap, ada, adp, ahk, as, as3, asc, ascx, asm, asp, awk, bash, bash_login, bash_logout, bash_profile, bashrc, bat, bib, bsh, build, builder, c, c++, capfile, cc, cfc, cfm, cfml, cl, clj, cls, cmake, cmd, coffee, cpp, cpt, cpy, cs, cshtml, cson, csproj, css, ctp, cxx, d, ddl, di, dif, diff, disco, dml, dtd, dtml, el, emakefile, erb, erl, f, f90, f95, fs, fsi, fsscript, fsx, gemfile, gemspec, gitconfig, go, groovy, gvy, h, h++, haml, handlebars, hbs, hcp, hh, hpp, hrl, hs, htc, hxx, idl, iim, inc, inf, ini, inl, ipp, irbrc, jade, jav, java, js, jsp, jsx, l, less, lhs, lisp, log, lst, ltx, lua, m, make, markdn, markdown, md, mdown, mkdn, ml, mli, mll, mly, mm, mud, nfo, opml, osascript, out, p, pas, patch, php, php2, php3, php4, php5, phtml, pl, plist, pm, pod, pp, profile, properties, ps1, pt, py, pyw, r, rake, rb, rbx, rc, re, readme, reg, rest, resw, resx, rhtml, rjs, rprofile, rpy, rss, rst, rxml, s, sass, scala, scm, sconscript, sconstruct, script, scss, sgml, sh, shtml, sml, sql, sty, tcl, tex, text, textile, tld, tli, tmpl, tpl, txt, vb, vi, vim, wsdl, xhtml, xml, xoml, xsd, xsl, xslt, yaml, yaws, yml, zsh
- Jean-Paul van den BogertCopper Contributor
Great news!
How about CAD files?- Stephen RoseMicrosoft
CAD files are in the works. :)
- Kristine CowdinCopper Contributorany progress made on these
Good job on this Stephen, but as a demanding customer I want more!
When will visio display thumbnails like other files do ?
When you support .markdown, I think many would expect it to render, not just viewing like a .txt file.
Thanks
- Nicolas CabeenMicrosoft
Hi Steven, Visio thumnails and a rich markdown viewer are both on our watchlist, and you should start seeing Visio thumbnails later this year!
Hey Nicolas Cabeen Stephen Rose did you sneak out support for rendering .md files recently ?
awesome.
- IvanWilsonIron Contributor
How can I configure SharePoint to display a preview of an msg file in the search results? Currently the mouse-over shows basic properties of the file, but no preview. Clicking on the item downloads it to my computer.
If I access the document library that contains the e-mail and it is using the modern library experience, clicking the item displays it in the web browser.
- Ivan54Bronze Contributor
IvanWilson wrote:How can I configure SharePoint to display a preview of an msg file in the search results? Currently the mouse-over shows basic properties of the file, but no preview. Clicking on the item downloads it to my computer.
If I access the document library that contains the e-mail and it is using the modern library experience, clicking the item displays it in the web browser.
Same is true for Visio files.
- Sam YatesCopper Contributor
Great stuff OneDrive team! Really killing it lately.
As for other formats. I know this one is a little tricky because of some historical capability/web service endpoints in SharePoint, but it would be pretty handy to be able to store and then view/read JSON files in OneDrive instead of just getting a "not found" error.
- Stephen RoseMicrosoft
Thanks for the suggestion. I will take it back to engineering. :)
- Scott DuffinCopper Contributor
Great additions! Is there a roadmap for including AutoCad DWG and SketchUp SKP File support?
- Scott DuffinCopper Contributor
Any updates for file viewers for those in the engineering community? DWG, DGN, DXF, SHP, SDF and specifically and many other formats used in the engineering world? Thanks for the update!
- Stephen RoseMicrosoftI would recommend going to user voice and making that ask. Best way to get those into the pipeline if others have the same need
- gkhairallahCopper Contributor
Good progress!
It appears that, at least for the time being, any shared links for non-logged in users automatically download the file. Are there any plans to embed the viewer for public links as well? This is a very important feature for us as we use those links as Quickbase link attachments, and having to download a file then open it, and doing constant cleanups of the downloads folder, seems inconvenient.
For comparison, Google Drive shares a link, you click on it (Logged in or not), and it would open the document in an online viewer in a browser tab.
Can you advise on that please?
Thank you!
- Awesome news for SPO and ODFB!! Great job
- Deleted
Oddly enough, just this week I have had several users asking about the inability to launch/play .wav files directly from SP libraries, but it seems like that's about the only file extension not included in your list. Any chance to get that looked into - it seems as though if video files could be handled, then audio files could too.
Currently, the only viable workaround for users is to open the library in Windows Explorer and play the files from there, or download the files.
- Stephen RoseMicrosoft
Let me share with engineering. Thanks for your post!
- PeterWhitehouseIron Contributor
Great work guys give yoursleves a pat on the back.
One my customers always seem to struggle with is fillable PDF forms, any way to open fill and save/save as coming to SPO or Edge?
- Jean-Michel_Le_GoffCopper Contributor
HI,
Could it be possible to add the support of multpiple Artboards in Ai files?
As now it is possble to create multiple Artboards in a single Ai File, it could be valuable to browse through all those Artboard without opening the file.
As it is possble for a PDF file.
You may notice that now an Ai File is a by default coded as a PDF file (no more an EPS), so to generate the previews of an Ai it should be possible to use the PDF engine...
Many Thanks
- Jim ReillyCopper Contributor
Has this been addressed yet??? It doesn't appear so as my users are still only seeing the first page of their .ai (Adobe Illustrator) files. Dropbox and Google Drive allow you to scroll through the pages/artboards.
- Ivan54Bronze Contributor
Hi Stephen Rose,
You've mentioned Adobe formats for the viewers in this post.
What about actually working with these files? I haven't found a way to open/edit images/psd/indesign files from Adobe CC desktop apps.
- Stephen RoseMicrosoftIvan,
It's the ability to see a full thumbnail preview of these files with out having a native app installed so you know their content. You will still require a program or viewer to open.- Ivan54Bronze Contributori get that, but I don't see any way to open any other file than office documents in their native desktop application. I only see the download option.
- Stephen RoseMicrosoft
No, these are thumbnail prevews only. It allows you to see the content of the files without having to open them to see. Since many Visio and Adobe format files are large, this makes it easier. These are the same viewers coming to W10 Fall Creators Edition. In order to open and edit, you will need a program to do so.
- Ivan54Bronze ContributorHi, sorry if I get back to this, but I feel misunderstood :P I'm trying to understand where the current limitation is to edit files directly at the document library level, without creating an offline copy.
In e.g. Word Online, you can select "Edit in Word" - this opens Word 2016 and opens the original file at the document library level, and saves it back directly to SharePoint Online.
In case of non Office file types, like PDF, PSD, JPGs,... there is no "Open in <native application>" option (even if it is installed on the computer). Therefore (without utilizing sync) a user would have to download a copy of that file to their computer, open it manually in the native application, edit the file and save it, and have it upload and overwrite the original file. Correct?
I'm trying to understand if this a current limitation on Microsofts part (SharePoint Library action button <open in native app> doesn't exist) or if other software vendors (e.g.) Adobe have to do something, or possibly both.
In Adobe Acrobats case, I know I can open PDFs saved to SharePoint directly in Acrobat, by adding a Document Library location and then checking out the file and saving it directly back. But there is no way to actually do this from the SharePoint Document Library itself, or is there?