AOI files exist as 2 different types. Please find information about each of them below.
Type 1: Art of Illusion 3D Scene
We have free online apps that allow to view, edit, convert, merge, split and compare AOI files. Click the links to see details for each feature. AOI files contain 3D objects, textures, animations for ...
We have free online apps that allow to view, edit, convert, merge, split and compare AOI files. Click the links to see details for each feature. AOI files contain 3D objects, textures, animations for the Art of Illusion program. They reference images not stored in the AOI file. AOI files use a format only recognized by Art of Illusion. Export the files to OBJ, POV, WRZ formats for other 3D software. Software to open Art of Illusion Scene files: Windows – Art of Illusion; Mac – Art of Illusion; Linux – Art of Illusion. AOI files have two file types, primarily the Art Of Illusion format. AOI files are supported by Art of Illusion and other software for Linux, Mac, Windows. Files with AOI extension are 3D Image Files. 622 file formats comprise the 3D Image Files subset. Users should use Art of Illusion to manage AOI files. More AOI file and Art of Illusion software details are on the official website. Programs supporting AOI files: Windows – Art of Illusion.
This article explains the AOI file. The AOI file relates to Microsoft Dynamics AX, an enterprise resource planning software by Microsoft. The AOI file contains an index of object data files used by Dy...
This article explains the AOI file. The AOI file relates to Microsoft Dynamics AX, an enterprise resource planning software by Microsoft. The AOI file contains an index of object data files used by Dynamics AX. This provides faster access to object data used by the program. We have free online AOI file apps. These allow viewing, editing, converting, merging, splitting, and comparing AOI files without installing anything. Please click the links to see details for each feature.
Dynamics AX uses many file extensions. These files locate in: C:\Program Files\Microsoft Dynamics AX\50\Application\Appl\[your_application]. The extensions have 3 characters. The first character indicates the file owner – “a” is application, “k” is kernel. The second character indicates the content. “l” means label. “o” means object. “d” means developer doc. “h” means help doc. The third character indicates the file type – “d” means data, “i” means index. So the extensions logically name files and show their purpose.