

To share any folder you want, click Custom Folders and click the add (+) button, then choose the folder you want to share.To share all your macOS folders, choose All disks from the Shared Folders menu.To share just the folders in your Home folder, choose Home folder only from the Shared Folders menu.Click Options and select Sharing > Share Mac.If the Parallels Desktop menu bar is visible at the top of the screen, choose Actions > Configure.Click the Parallels icon in the menu bar and choose Configure.To enable macOS folders for sharing with Windows applications: When you open a file (for example, by choosing File > Open in many applications), your shared macOS folders appear as network shared directories labeled "psf." With folder sharing enabled, you can navigate to any shared macOS folder from within a Windows application. Note: These instructions apply to sharing folders between macOS and Linux as well.Īccess a macOS Folder or File from a Windows Application Parallels Desktop allows you to share folders between the macOS and Windows file systems, so you can easily open macOS files from Windows applications and Windows files from macOS applications. For all other file types, a compatible Quick Look plugin must be installed and registered to handle the appropriate file types.Share Files and Folders Share Files and Folders PDF and text documents are natively supported by Fileloupe. Only media files that can be opened in QuickTime Player are supported:Ĭommon video formats that are not supported include: Jpg, jpeg-2000, png, gif, tiff, bmp, psd and tga.Įxperimental support is included for the following image formats:Ĭin, dpx, hdr, rgbe, exr, sxr, mxr, rla, sgi, rgb, rgba, bw, int, inta, pic and webp.įor a list of supported RAW files, please refer to Apple's Support Page:ĭigital camera RAW formats supported by iOS 10 and macOS Sierra.Ĭommon image formats that are not supported include: ImagesĬommon image types that are supported include: In cases where a file type is not natively supported by macOS, Fileloupe will attempt to display it with any third-party Quick Look plugin that might be installed. If a file will not open in any of those applications, then it will likely not open in Fileloupe. If you're able to view a file with the Finder, Preview.app or QuickTime Player, then you should be able to view it with Fileloupe. Fileloupe supports most file formats that are natively supported by macOS.
