

exe files, and you might need to scour their support page for help if you run into issues. It's open-source and free to use it won't open all. But, it doesn't run Windows itself: it allows you to flawlessly integrate Windows programs into your desktop. You should check here to see if/how the program can be run in wine. Wine is a compatibility layer that enables you to run Windows apps on your Mac. Wine was initially developed with Linux in mind, but eventually, it was ported over to Mac OS. Once wine is installed, you can run a Windows executable by right clicking it and clicking 'open with wine Windows program loader' or using the terminal as explained above. Wine supports Linux, Mac OS, BSD and Solaris Operating Systems.

When you try to install a Windows application on iMac or MacBook computers, you will get an error because you cannot run Windows-compatible software on a Apple computer. Even if CrossOver uses Wine code in order to run applications, it provides you with a intuitive graphical interface and it, allegedly, offers support for more apps than the latter (you can see the list of supported tools here).
