The Wine package comes with a few utilities, which you can access from the applications menu. Once it’s installed, you’ll find its shortcuts in your applications menu, and possibly on your desktop.
#Wine emulator manual on mac install
If the application requires installation, install it as if you were using Windows. For example, the fixme message here indicates that Wine doesn’t contain support for a specific function yet, but the application runs fine without this function. If you have an MSI file instead, use the following command to install it:īear in mind that many of the error messages don’t matter. If you’re encountering a problem, you can run the application from the terminal to see detailed error messages that can help you troubleshoot the problem. This isn’t always the best way to run an application. Once you’ve got Wine installed, you can download an application’s EXE or MSI (Microsoft Installer) file and double-click it - just like you would if you were using Windows - to run it with Wine. An application’s entry in the Wine application database sometimes contains information about the necessary version of Wine you’ll need.
The stable version is more tested - sometimes, a regression in the beta version can cause an application to stop working, but some applications will only work with the newer, beta version. Both stable and beta versions are available - here, version 1.2 is stable and version 1.3 is beta.
You’ll find Wine available in the Ubuntu Software Center. For many apps, particularly popular ones, you’ll find a full guide to installing your application in Wine, as well as tweaks to fix any annoying issues.