How to open .CWW files on iOS
To open .CWW files on iOS, iOS generally won’t open .CWW natively; if the file came from Crossword Weaver or WoodWorks, transfer it to a desktop system with the corresponding software to view/use it.
Step-by-step instructions
- iOS generally won’t open .CWW natively; if the file came from Crossword Weaver or WoodWorks, transfer it to a desktop system with the corresponding software to view/use it.
Recommended software
- Textastic
- Kodex
- Files app
Alternative methods
- Open .CWW in a browser-based viewer if desktop apps fail.
- Try opening .CWW on iOS with a secondary app to rule out app-specific issues.
- Convert .CWW only with trusted tools when direct opening is not possible.
Common issues
The .CWW file won’t open (wrong program)
The .CWW extension is used by different, unrelated formats. If you open it in the wrong application (or an OS-default app), it may fail or show as corrupted.
- Check where the file came from: Crossword Weaver puzzle vs. WoodWorks database (Sizer/Shearwalls workflow).
- Open it using the matching application (Crossword Weaver for puzzle files; the relevant WoodWorks software for database files).
Windows asks “How do you want to open this file?”
No application is currently associated with .CWW on your system, or the required software is not installed.
- Install the correct software for your .CWW type (Crossword Weaver or the applicable WoodWorks program).
- Use Right-click → Open with to pick the installed program and optionally set it as the default.
File appears corrupted or incomplete
Binary data files can fail to open if truncated during download/copy, or if created by a newer/older version that isn’t compatible with your installed software.
- Re-copy or re-download the file from the original source (avoid email clients or cloud sync conflicts if possible).
- Try opening it with the same product and version family that created it (e.g., the corresponding WoodWorks application, or Crossword Weaver).
Trying to edit a WoodWorks .CWW database directly
WoodWorks documentation describes .cww as a binary database format, which is not intended for manual editing and may be locked to the application’s database management process.
- Use the WoodWorks application’s supported database workflow (per WoodWorks help) rather than editing the file in a text or hex editor.
- If you need to change materials/components, make the changes through the WoodWorks software features designed for database management.
Security note
.CWW files are typically binary data; they are not meant to contain macros like office documents, but a malicious or malformed file can still exploit bugs in the program that parses it—only open files from sources you trust.