How to open .BSD files on Android
To open .BSD files on Android, android is unlikely to have common native support for Crossfire/Beilstein .BSD files; treat it as a file to transfer rather than open directly.
Step-by-step instructions
- Android is unlikely to have common native support for Crossfire/Beilstein .BSD files; treat it as a file to transfer rather than open directly.
- Upload/share it to a desktop system with the producing chemistry/Crossfire-compatible software, or request an exported alternative format.
Recommended software
- Acode
- QuickEdit
- JSON Genie
Alternative methods
- Open .BSD in a browser-based viewer if desktop apps fail.
- Try opening .BSD on Android with a secondary app to rule out app-specific issues.
- Convert .BSD only with trusted tools when direct opening is not possible.
Common issues
The file opens with the wrong app or shows as an unknown type
.BSD is not universally recognized across operating systems, and the chemical/x-crossfire identification is primarily a desktop MIME-database convention rather than an official, globally registered media type.
- Ask the sender what application created the file and whether it is a Beilstein Crossfire/Crossfire-related export.
- On Linux, update/rebuild MIME databases if needed and re-associate the file to the correct application via “Open With…”.
- Open from within the intended chemistry application using an Import/Open command instead of double-click.
“File is corrupted” or import fails
The file may be incomplete (transfer/download issue) or not actually a Crossfire/Beilstein file despite the .bsd extension.
- Re-download or re-copy the file and compare file size/checksum if the sender can provide one.
- Verify the format with the sender; request a fresh export from the source system.
- If you suspect the extension is misleading, identify it by content on a desktop system before trying other tools.
No software available on mobile to view it
Crossfire/Beilstein .BSD files are specialized chemical data files and typically require desktop chemistry software; mobile platforms often lack compatible viewers/importers.
- Transfer the file to a desktop OS where the appropriate chemistry/Crossfire-compatible tool is available.
- Ask the sender for an export to a more commonly supported chemistry interchange format used by your toolchain.
Security note
.BSD (chemical/x-crossfire) is a data file, but it may still trigger vulnerabilities in complex file parsers; only open it in trusted, up-to-date chemistry software, especially if it came from an untrusted source.