While working on a downloader, I've encountered the following with Python's mimetypes.guess_extension
function:
In [2]: mimetypes.guess_extension('image/jpeg', strict=False)
Out[2]: '.jpe'
I knew that jpeg and jpg are valid JPEG extensions, but I didn't know about jpe. So looking at the wikipedia site did reveal the following:
The most common filename extensions for files employing JPEG compression are .jpg and .jpeg, though .jpe, .jfif and .jif are also used
Even more extensions I didn't know of.
So the main question: Why does JPEG have so many (valid) extensions associated with it?
On a related note I'd like to know why Python does return 'jpe' and not 'jpg' or 'jpeg' since I see these used the most.