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I've made a word-processor named StoryTeller in Java (a first - beta version, which I'm still working on improving) and put it online for others to test out and use.

I've gotten a response saying they were unable to open it. I've built and run StoryTeller on Windows 10 OS and it works fine. After generating the jar file, I used Inno setup to generate an installer for the program. You can find the file I've uploaded here. Here's the message I got about it:

Hello! I was going to try out StoryTeller on my Macbook today, but unfortunately it didn't work. The file automatically gets opened in "Text Editor" where encrypted text shows up along with the error message "this program must be run under Win32".

I downloaded it on my old computer earlier this week (it has windows 7) and the download process and installation worked perfectly fine, but I was unable to open the program when the installation was done. It appeared on my desk as a Java-symbol (the icon) and nothing happened when I clicked on it. Both my OS are quite old (Macbook from 2010 and the other computer from 2012), but I've still updated them as much as possible and installed all the latest versions available of necessary programs, so I'm not sure whether the problem lies within my computers or StoryTeller itself.

Do you have any ideas how I can fix this? I would really like to try StoryTeller since it seems to be a great concept that could really come in handy when I work on my novel.

Could anyone help, please, understand what may be the issue here? Thanks.

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    .exe is a windows only format
    – Ferrybig
    Mar 14, 2016 at 9:35
  • ok. i'll see if i can find how to make it for other platforms then. but still why would it not work on that windows 7? Mar 14, 2016 at 21:40

1 Answer 1

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  • First, check if your JDK is 32-bits and make sure to advice your future users have a 32-bit JRE installed. This way, it may work properly. I think 64-bit Java apps can't run atop a 32-bit JRE;
  • You can bundle a proper JRE/JVM with your software;
  • Make sure you are referencing ANYTHING with absolute paths inside your code. This could make your software throw several exceptions when running somewhere else;

For instance, Inno-setup commonly generates Windows-only .exe setups. Installing your software in a Mac would require you to generate a .dmg or .pkg (this one you could create through PackageMaker extension from XCode here (require registration, more info here

Kappy on Jul 5, 2012 6:28 PM says: Go to connect.apple.com and search for "packagemaker." Of course you must first be logged into your developer account.

))

For Linux, you can provide a simple shellscript bundled with your .jar (even with a discrete JVM) in a .zip or .tar.gz file, and ask your future users to run the provided shellscript.

Good luck!

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