How to open .DNA files on iOS
To open .DNA files on iOS, iOS typically cannot open SnapGene .dna natively; transfer the file to a desktop with SnapGene for reliable viewing and conversion.
Step-by-step instructions
- iOS typically cannot open SnapGene .dna natively; transfer the file to a desktop with SnapGene for reliable viewing and conversion.
Recommended software
- Textastic
- Kodex
- Files app
Alternative methods
- Open .DNA in a browser-based viewer if desktop apps fail.
- Try opening .DNA on iOS with a secondary app to rule out app-specific issues.
- Convert .DNA only with trusted tools when direct opening is not possible.
Common issues
The .dna file opens as gibberish or won’t open in a text editor
SnapGene .dna is a structured binary format (not plain text), so general text editors and many viewers will not display it correctly.
- Open the file with SnapGene rather than a text editor.
- If you need a text-based format, use SnapGene to export/convert the file to a common molecular biology format.
Double-click opens the wrong program (or asks for an app)
The file association may be missing or set to a different application.
- Use Open with (Windows) or Open With (macOS) and choose SnapGene.
- Set SnapGene as the default app for .dna files if you open them frequently.
Import/conversion fails or annotations look incomplete after conversion
Not all target formats preserve the same types of annotations/metadata that can be stored in SnapGene’s native .dna format.
- When exporting, choose a target format that supports annotations/features when possible.
- Validate the resulting file by reopening it and checking key features/annotations before sharing or submitting it.
File appears corrupted or won’t load in SnapGene
The file may be incomplete (truncated download) or otherwise damaged; binary container formats are sensitive to partial corruption.
- Re-download or re-transfer the file using a reliable method (avoid partial email/web downloads).
- Ask the sender to re-export or resend the original .dna file, then try opening again.
Security note
.dna is a binary format; treat unexpected .dna files as untrusted input because malformed or maliciously crafted binary files can target parser vulnerabilities in any application that reads them.