File Allocation Table

Family of filesystems originally developed by Microsoft
trends
NovemberDecember2025FebruaryMarchApril0500
inception
1977
alias
VFAT
FAT
Stack Exchange tag
Wikipedia creation date
9/25/2001
Wikipedia incoming links count
Wikipedia opening text
File Allocation Table (FAT) is a computer file system architecture and a family of industry-standard file systems utilizing it. The FAT file system is a continuing standard which borrows source code from the original, legacy file system and proves to be simple and robust. It offers useful performance even in lightweight implementations, but cannot deliver the same performance, reliability and scalability as some modern file systems. It is, however, supported for compatibility reasons by nearly all currently developed operating systems for personal computers and many mobile devices and embedded systems, and thus is a well-suited format for data exchange between computers and devices of almost any type and age from 1981 up to the present. Originally designed in 1977 for use on floppy disks, FAT was soon adapted and used almost universally on hard disks throughout the DOS and Windows 9x eras for two decades. As disk drives evolved, the capabilities of the file system have been extended accordingly, resulting in three major file system variants: FAT12, FAT16 and FAT32. The FAT standard has also been expanded in other ways while generally preserving backward compatibility with existing software. With the introduction of more powerful computers and operating systems, as well as the development of more complex file systems for them, FAT is no longer the default file system for usage on Microsoft Windows computers. FAT file systems are still commonly found on floppy disks, flash and other solid-state memory cards and modules (including USB flash drives), as well as many portable and embedded devices. FAT is the standard file system for digital cameras per the DCF specification.
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FAT32
VFAT
FAT12
FAT-32
FAT16
File allocation table
FAT file system
Microsoft FAT patents
Microsoft FAT Patent
Microsoft FAT Patents
File Allocation Tables
FAT-12
FAT filesystem
Vfat
Fat32
Fat16
Fat12
FAT 32
FAT 16
FAT 12
ECMA 107
PCFS
FATX
XFAT
FAT16B
FAT32X
FAT16X
Logical sectored FAT
FATX16
FATX32
ECMA-107
ISO/IEC 9293
Ecma-107
ISO 9293
FAT+
FAT32+
FAT16+
FATPLUS
Logical sectoring
FAT8
File Allocation Table (variants)
8-bit FAT
12-bit FAT
16-bit FAT
32-bit FAT
28-bit FAT
10-bit FAT
FAT-16
FASTFAT.SYS
FASTFAT
DOS filesystem
DOS file system
FAT12 file system
FAT12 filesystem
FAT16 file system
FAT16 filesystem
FAT32 filesystem
FAT32 file system
FAT16B filesystem
FAT16B file system
FAT16X filesystem
FAT16X file system
FAT32X filesystem
FAT32X file system
8-bit File Allocation Table
12-bit File Allocation Table
16-bit File Allocation Table
10-bit File Allocation Table
28-bit File Allocation Table
32-bit File Allocation Table
File Allocation Table historical evolution
File Allocation table historical evolution
FAT extended attributes
FAT extended file attributes
FAT structure
FAT patent
XTAF
BIGDOS
DOS 3.31 Large File System
BigFAT
BigFAT (file system)
FAT32B
FAT32B+
8-bit FAT cluster
10-bit FAT cluster
VFAT patent
FAT long file name
FAT long filename
FAT LFN
FAT LFN support
FAT long file name support
FAT long filename support
Virtual File Allocation Table
Virtual FAT
FAT (filesystem)
FAT partition
FAT volume
FAT12 volume
FAT12 partition
FAT16 partition
FAT16 volume
FAT16B volume
FAT16B partition
FAT32 partition
FAT32 volume
FAT16X volume
FAT16X partition
FAT32X partition
FAT32X volume
File allocation table (file system)
FAT (8-bit)
FAT (8 bits)
FAT (12-bit)
FAT (12 bits)
FAT (10-bit)
FAT (10 bits)
FAT (16-bit)
FAT (16 bits)
FAT (28-bit)
FAT (28 bits)
FAT (32-bit)
FAT (32 bits)
EA DATA. SF
Wikipedia URL
File Format Wiki page ID
Freebase ID
PRONOM file format identifier
external links