.3ds

This article is about the Autodesk 3DS Max file format. For the name of the file format of N3DS game files information, see Nintendo 3DS. For other uses, see 3ds (disambiguation).
3DS Max fil
Filename extension .3ds
Internet media type application/x-3ds, image/x-3ds
Magic number 4D 4D (hex), MM (ASCII)
Developed by Autodesk Inc.
Type of format 3D file formats

3DS is one of the file formats used by the Autodesk 3ds Max 3D modeling, animation and rendering software.

It was the native file format of the old Autodesk 3D Studio DOS (releases 1 to 4), which was popular until its successor (3D Studio MAX 1.0) replaced it in April 1996. Having been around since 1990 (when the first version of 3D Studio DOS was launched), it has grown to become a de facto industry standard for transferring models between 3D programs, or for storing models for 3D resource catalogs (along with OBJ, which is more frequently used as a model archiving file format).[1]

While the 3DS format aims to provide an import/export format, retaining only essential geometry, texture and lighting data, the related MAX format (now superseded by the PRJ format) also contains extra information specific to Autodesk 3ds Max, to allow a scene to be completely saved/loaded.

Structure

3ds is a binary file format.

The format is based in chunks, where each section of data is embedded in a block that contains a chunk identifier and the length of the data (to provide the location of the next main block), as well as the data itself. This allows parsers to skip chunks they don't recognize, and allows for extensions to the format.

The chunks form a hierarchical structure, similar to an xml DOM tree. The first two bytes of the chunk are its ID. From that value the parser can identify the chunk and decide whether it will parse it or skip it. The next four bytes contain a little-endian integer that is the length of the chunk, including its data, the length of its sub-blocks and the 6-byte header. The next bytes are the chunk's data, followed by the sub-chunks, in a structure that may extend to several levels deep.

Below is a list of the most common IDs for chunks, represented in a hierarchical fashion depicting their dependencies:[2][3]

0x4D4D // Main Chunk
├─ 0x0002 // M3D Version
├─ 0x3D3D // 3D Editor Chunk
  ├─ 0x4000 // Object Block
    ├─ 0x4100 // Triangular Mesh
      ├─ 0x4110 // Vertices List
      ├─ 0x4120 // Faces Description
        ├─ 0x4130 // Faces Material
        └─ 0x4150 // Smoothing Group List
      ├─ 0x4140 // Mapping Coordinates List
      └─ 0x4160 // Local Coordinates System
    ├─ 0x4600 // Light
      └─ 0x4610 // Spotlight
    └─ 0x4700 // Camera
  └─ 0xAFFF // Material Block
     ├─ 0xA000 // Material Name
     ├─ 0xA010 // Ambient Color
     ├─ 0xA020 // Diffuse Color
     ├─ 0xA030 // Specular Color
     ├─ 0xA200 // Texture Map 1
     ├─ 0xA230 // Bump Map
     └─ 0xA220 // Reflection Map
          /* Sub Chunks For Each Map */
        ├─ 0xA300 // Mapping Filename
        └─ 0xA351 // Mapping Parameters
└─ 0xB000 // Keyframer Chunk
   ├─ 0xB002 // Mesh Information Block
   ├─ 0xB007 // Spot Light Information Block
   └─ 0xB008 // Frames (Start and End)
      ├─ 0xB010 // Object Name
      ├─ 0xB013 // Object Pivot Point
      ├─ 0xB020 // Position Track
      ├─ 0xB021 // Rotation Track
      ├─ 0xB022 // Scale Track
      └─ 0xB030 // Hierarchy Position

Shortcomings

It has been pointed out that, despite its popularity, the format may not be the most suitable for 3D data exchange. Some of the disadvantages mentioned are:[1]

Notes

  1. Smoothing groups (read about surfaces on Elements of Mesh Modeling for the rationale of their use) are stored as a bit field, with 4 bytes (a long int) for each face, thus allowing up to 32 (4×8) smoothing groups per face.

References

External links

web pages
text-file references
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